Evaluating Electronic Portfolios in Teacher Education


Book Description

While Research on the effectiveness of electronic portfolios for assessment and accreditation is emerging, many who are now using, or who are beginning to use, electronic portfolios are looking to justify the cost and effort involved. The purposes of this volume are to create an in-depth portrait of ways in which electronic portfolios efforts can be evaluated effectively, and to provide xamples of e-folio evaluation in the form of case studies. The intention of these chapters is to serve as models for assessment and evaluation of electronic portfolios in teacher education, as well as to spark further investigations on this tool that is ecoming ubiquitous in so many SCDE’s across the United States and abroad.




The E-portfolio Paradigm


Book Description




Digital Portfolios in Teacher Education


Book Description

"This new book presents the skills necessary for building and maintaining digital portfolios and emphasizing their significance in today's educational system. Helpful student tips and advice add to the conceptual and technical information related to this technology. This book will become an important practical tool for education majors during their college years and throughout their professional careers." -- back cover.




Portfolios Across the Curriculum and Beyond


Book Description

PLEASE UPDATE SAGE INDIA AND SAGE U.K. ADDRESSES ON IMPRINT PAGE.




A Tale of Two Programs


Book Description

Background: Teacher education programs in the State of California are increasingly held accountable for the assessment of teacher candidates' competencies and performance. One salient assessment tool is the utilization of portfolios in teacher education programs (Wolf, 1989; 1991). Among the newest and most innovative templates of portfolios in teacher education are electronic portfolios. Electronic portfolios are gaining popularity in part, due to the prevalence of their technological accessibility and the numerous on-line portfolio options. Purpose: The primary research question addressed was how do the constituents (e.g., credential candidates, faculty, and portfolio evaluators) perceive the electronic portfolio processes within and across the two teacher preparation programs. Setting: This study took place at a start-up public university across two fifth-year credential programs respectively-- the Education Specialist: Mild/Moderate Disabilities Level One and the Single Subject Credential Programs. Study Sample: Twenty credential candidates and six evaluators participated in the Education Specialist pilot assessment project. Twelve credential candidates and five evaluators participated in the Single Subject pilot assessment project. Intervention: Research Design: Qualitative Control or Comparison Condition: Data Collection and Analysis: Data were collected through detailed field notes, focus group interviews, and student portfolios. Data were coded by themes and analyzed. Findings: The two major themes of process and tool oriented issues related to the use of electronic portfolios emerged from the comparative data analysis within and across the two credential programs. Time, usability for evaluators, and management of the electronic environment were major findings. Conclusion: Overall, a portfolio must be and perceived as integrated into a teacher education program by students and faculty. It is important that portfolio elements aligned and goals and tasks are clear to the participants. Additionally, the time and resources needed to successfully implement and maintain a portfolio system must not be overlooked. Coordinating the players and tasks, evaluation of candidate work, evaluation of process, aggregation and analysis of data, data management, and maintenance of the process are all necessary elements in a successful portfolio assessment process. Citation: Grier, J. M., Denney, M. K., Clark, M. M. (2006). A tale of two programs: A comparative study of electronic portfolio assessment in teacher education. (Contains 1 table and 1 footnote.).




Handbook of Research on ePortfolios


Book Description

"This handbook investigates a variety of ePortfolio uses through case studies, the technology that supports the case studies, and it also explains the conceptual thinking behind current uses as well as potential uses"--Provided by publisher.




Developing Portfolios in Education


Book Description

Developing Portfolios in Education: A Guide to Reflection, Inquiry, and Assessment, Second Edition takes preservice and inservice teachers through the process of developing a professional portfolio. It is designed to teach readers how traditional and electronic portfolios are defined, organized, and evaluated. The text also helps teachers to use their portfolios as an action research tool for reflection and professional development.




E-Portfolios in Higher Education


Book Description

This book shares the collective experience of integrating electronic portfolios as assessment tools and as instruments for life-long learning in courses across various disciplines in higher education. It enables readers to trace the evolution of e-portfolios over the last ten years and to deal with the challenges faced by instructors and students when implementing e-portfolios in their respective courses. Further, the book suggests flexible ways of dealing with those challenges. It also highlights the relevance of electronic portfolios for the needs and demands of contemporary societies. As such, it speaks to a large target audience from a range of disciplines, roles and geographical contexts within the wider context of higher education in Asia and around the globe.




Digital Portfolios in the Classroom


Book Description

Assessment is messy. Day-to-day, in-the-moment assessments not only reveal information that drives future instruction but also offer a comprehensive picture of students’ abilities and dispositions toward learning. As teachers, we might know what this looks and feels like, yet it can be hard to put into action—hence the messiness. Say hello to digital student portfolios—dynamic, digital collections of authentic information from different media, in many forms, and with multiple purposes. Using digital portfolios to capture student thinking and progress allows us to better see our students as readers, writers, and learners—and help students see themselves in the same way! Matt Renwick’s Digital Portfolios in the Classroom is a guide to help teachers sort through, capture, and make sense of the messiness associated with assessment. By shining a spotlight on three types of student portfolios—performance, process, and progress—and how they can be used to assess student work, Renwick helps educators navigate the maze of digital tools and implement the results to drive instruction.




Evaluating Technology in Teacher Education


Book Description

Overall we come away from this project with a renewed sense of the complexity of evaluating the implementation and impact of technology in teacher education. In the post-PT3 period the federal government turned to large-scale experimental and quasi-experimental evaluations of educational technology but these have produced little in the way of understanding what types of technology work in various content areas under various conditions. PT3 and its approach to evaluation can be viewed as the pioneering period of educational technology evaluation in teacher education. It was a time when evaluators were just beginning to develop appropriate standards that could be used as evaluation criteria. It was a time when the accumulated wisdom of the evaluation field with regards to the primacy of mixed methods and multiple indicators of outcomes was just beginning to take hold. PT3 evaluators understood the importance of treading the line between summative and formative evaluation, and the relationship of evaluation to the improvement of educational practice. In a world where the policymakers now clamor for simple quantitative evaluations linking teacher preparation to pupil achievement scores, we are reminded that the causal chain from teacher preparation to in-service performance and student achievement is fraught with externalities, complexities and a less than equal playing field. Collectively we still have not figured out how technology may be adding value to education beyond any potential impact on superficial standardized test scores. We have as a nation, ignored the call of cognitive psychologists who in 2000 called for a new frame of reference for learner-centered, community-centered , assessment-centered and content-centered educational processes. They understood that the high stakes accountability systems hinder educational innovation and the release of technology's potential to unlock new ways of knowing and learning. Looking back now on the accomplishments of the PT3 program within our current political context, we see a need for more nuanced evaluation models that examine the relationship between pedagogy and technology integration, with a realization that teacher preparation programs will vary in their approaches to both. Some will focus on skills-based approaches, others on the relationship between pedagogical content knowledge and technology integration. The PT3 program served as an important incubator and test-bed of appropriate evaluation practice; we are already looking back at the program for lessons on how to move forward. We hope this volume may serve as a reminder of lessons for the future.