90 likes | 210 Views
e-Portfolio Reference Model. Locating informal services in the e-Framework Peter Rees Jones JISC-CETIS e-Portfolio Feasibility Study. V1 2006 07 18 PRJ. Formative use of Course Entry Profiles for the Personal Statement:.
E N D
e-Portfolio Reference Model Locating informal services in the e-Framework Peter Rees Jones JISC-CETIS e-Portfolio Feasibility Study V1 2006 07 18 PRJ
Formative use of Course Entry Profiles for the Personal Statement: WS 1 calls the entry profile for a particular course at a particular HEI into a blank Structured Personal Statement
Formative use of Course Entry Profiles for the Personal Statement: WS 2 helps me link assertions and activities to evidence in my e-P to create a Personal Profile in terms of the entry requirements
Formative use of Course Entry Profiles for the Personal Statement: WS 3 helps me link assertions and activities to evidence in my e-P such as a section of a project
Formative use of Course Entry Profiles for the Personal Statement: WS 4 allows my adviser to formatively assess the statementand give me feedback. I repeat the process to make a formal application to this course. Many potential applicants use informal services like MSN or Bebo to work through issues with friends. Initiatives like Nagty begin to formalise these patterns
e-Portfolio service flow conclusions • The service flows cross between e-Learning, and e-Administration • There is a strong analogy or identity with standard assessment patterns • The data generated are potentially of use for feedback to individuals for personal development, for quality assurance by managers and for Research • By quantifying common patterns underlying service designs we quantify domains in which evidence of impact may be sought • Mapping the formal educative processes provided to support transitions reveals the growing importance of the social software applicants co-opt to support themselves.
Thin e-Portfolio for Specialised 14 – 19 Diplomas Neither the services consuming and producing information nor the repositories storing that information need to be contained within an e-Portfolio system.
Implications • Thin e-Portfolio exploits the opportunities and economies that Web 2.0 promises • But Web 2.0 will require most learners to develop the kind of capability currently held by a minority of elite learners • The use of e-Portfolio to make application to University or a first job may become key to an individual’s career prospects • Is e-Portfolio the scaffolding that all learners will require to develop their role as citizens within a knowledge economy? • There is a need to develop a new generation of practice enabling all types of people to exploit the opportunities that Web 2.0 opens out for themselves and society.