Electronic Portfolios 2.0


Book Description

Higher education institutions of all kinds—across the United States and around the world—have rapidly expanded the use of electronic portfolios in a broad range of applications including general education, the major, personal planning, freshman learning communities, advising, assessing, and career planning.Widespread use creates an urgent need to evaluate the implementation and impact of eportfolios. Using qualitative and quantitative methods, the contributors to this book—all of whom have been engaged with the Inter/National Coalition for Electronic Portfolio Research—have undertaken research on how eportfolios influence learning and the learning environment for students, faculty members, and institutions.This book features emergent results of studies from 20 institutions that have examined effects on student reflection, integrative learning, establishing identity, organizational learning, and designs for learning supported by technology. It also describes how institutions have responded to multiple challenges in eportfolio development, from engaging faculty to going to scale. These studies exemplify how eportfolios can spark disciplinary identity, increase retention, address accountability, improve writing, and contribute to accreditation. The chapters demonstrate the applications of eportfolios at community colleges, small private colleges, comprehensive universities, research universities, and a state system.




ePortfolio Performance Support Systems


Book Description

ePortfolio Performance Support Systems: Constructing, Presenting, and Assessing Portfolios addresses theories and practices advanced by some of the most innovative and active proponents of ePortfolios.




Eportfolios for Lifelong Learning and Assessment


Book Description

This book clearly articulates the foundations of an educational vision that is distinctively supported by eportfolio use, drawing on work in philosophy, sociology, higher and adult education, and elearning research. It is academically rigorous and accessible not only to scholars in a range of disciplines who might study or use eportfolios. It surveys the state-of-the-art of international eportfolio practice and suggests future directions for higher educational institutions in terms of curriculum, assessment, and technology. This resource is written for scholars, support staff, instructional technologists, academic administrators, and policy makers.




Documenting Learning with ePortfolios


Book Description

Documenting Learning with ePortfolios Documenting Learning with ePortfolios provides higher education instructors with a theory-to-practice approach to understanding the pedagogy behind ePortfolios and to helping students use them to record and reflect on their learning in multiple contexts. The authors outline a framework of six critical iterative tasks to undertake when implementing ePortfolios for student success. Filled with real-life models of successful ePortfolio projects, the book also includes guidance for faculty development to support the use of ePortfolios and covers the place of ePortfolios in institutional assessment efforts. Finally, the authors offer considerations for deciding on which technological tools to deploy in implementing a successful ePortfolio initiative. "These authors achieve the very rare accomplishment of combining their years of practical experience, broad conceptual and research underpinnings, and incredibly useful examples and applications into a single, concise volume for enhancing student learning through an ePortfolio approach to our shared educational purpose." TERREL L. RHODES, vice president, Office of Quality, Curriculum, and Assessment, Association of American Colleges and Universities "Educators keep asking for more information about how to use electronic portfolios. This book provides answers, guidelines, examples, and scholarly insights about learning based in the wisdom of the ePortfolio community of practice what a powerful addition to our collective knowledge! I am thankful to the authors for this boost to our field and for providing a blueprint for implementers to follow." TRENT BATSON, executive director, The Association for Authentic, Experiential and Evidence-Based Learning




EPortfolios@edu


Book Description

"This edited volume explores best practices in creating, implementing, and assessing an ePortfolio program on today's college or university campus. The ePortfolio practitioner/scholars who contributed to this volume, representing four different countries in as many continents, share success stories and lessons learned from a first-person perspective. Envisioning ePortfolio@edu as a go-to manual for ePortfolio novices, seasoned practitioners, and curious explorers alike, Dellinger and Hart trust that readers will be able to close the book and immediately apply whatever information they found most appropriate for their situation. Towards that end, contributors have embedded screenshots and diagrams within their essays as well as ready-to-use materials including timelines, rubrics, and forms. Readers can download updates and additions to the materials in ePortfolios@edu on the companion website where, among other open-access e resources, they will also find software reviews and links to contributors' and editors' professional ePortfolios"--




The Educational Potential of E-Portfolios


Book Description

E-portfolios are being used increasingly often, and will soon become integral to higher education. This book is an entry-level guide to developing an effective e-portfolio for a variety of uses, aimed at those who support students in their learning.




The Learning Portfolio


Book Description

The learning portfolio is a powerful complement to traditional measures of student achievement and a widely diverse method of recording intellectual growth. This second edition of this important book offers new samples of print and electronic learning portfolios. An academic understanding of and rationale for learning portfolios and practical information that can be customized. Offers a review of the value of reflective practice in student learning and how learning portfolios support assessment and collaboration. Includes revised sample assignment sheets, guidelines, criteria, evaluation rubrics, and other material for developing print and electronic portfolios.




The E-portfolio Paradigm


Book Description




Electronic Portfolios


Book Description

This book explains the motivations for building and using portfolio tools, and clarifies the principles and practice of using and developing them for assessment, recording personal information, self-presentation, personal and professional development, and for subtler and deeper aims of encouraging a reflective approach to learning, practice and life, developing personal identity, and ethical development towards moral agency. The book also offers a stimulating future vision to orient those with a longer-term perspective on the directions in which portfolio tools and related technology are advancing. The only book with a coherent future vision of the e-portfolio field grounded in current practice Brings together principles, technologies and practical guidance for users and practitioners




Integrating Study Abroad Into the Curriculum


Book Description

With the increased interest in study abroad from government, educators, employers and students, the question is: are programs engendering the desired intercultural competencies and intellectual development? To achieve this goal, this book proposes two strategies: structuring study abroad to bridge the separation of academic learning from experiential and intercultural learning; and integrating study abroad with the undergraduate curriculum. In proposing this integration, the editors take into account the need for institutional change, and they recognize faculty's concerns about maintaining the integrity of the curriculum, teaching in areas outside their expertise, and keeping up with ever-evolving institutional missions. This book offers different theoretical perspectives on the integration of study abroad into the curriculum, as well as examples of practice from a variety of disciplines--from anthropology and religious studies, to literature, urban studies, biology, and public health--and within such contexts as distance learning, service learning, and the senior thesis.