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Una Daly, Kevin Kelly, Kathleen Willbanks. ePortfolios 101. ePortfolios 101. Introductions Una Daly – ePortfolio CA Pilot Coordinator, California Virtual Campus Dr. Kevin Kelly – SF State, Online Teaching and Learning Coordinator for Academic Technology
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Una Daly, Kevin Kelly, Kathleen Willbanks ePortfolios 101
ePortfolios 101 • Introductions • Una Daly – ePortfolio CA Pilot Coordinator, California Virtual Campus • Dr. Kevin Kelly – SF State, Online Teaching and Learning Coordinator for Academic Technology • Kathleen Willbanks – CSU CDL, CSU ePortfolio Coordinator
Portfolios are not new… for instructors and programs to assess student work to share student work for accreditation and / or program review for students to use as a valuable tool for career connections Universities have used paper-based portfolios: 3
An ePortfolio allows us to collect, select, build and publishour work using electronic technology as the container National Learning Infrastructure Initiative definition: • A collection of authentic and diverse evidence, • Drawn from a larger archive representing what a person or organization has learned over time, • On which the person or organization has reflected, and • Designed for presentation to one or more audiences for a particular rhetorical purpose. (2003)
ePortfolio Purposes used for: • Developmental Portfolios Making academic connections • Assessment Portfolios Demonstration of mastery • Presentation/Career Portfolios Evidence of skills & prior experience
ePortfolios Uses Individual class requirements Graduation requirements Capstone Projects E-Standards/competency compliance for certification Employment/resumes Document Experiential Learning Professional Development
Teaching/Learning Advising ePortfolios Workforce Development Program/ Institutional Assessment & Accreditation Technology
Key Functions Learning Object Repository Presentation System Assessment / Tracking
Choosing Tools Identify Activities First Learn from other Programs Engage Stakeholders on your Campus Map Needs to Tool Features
Document Competencies Patient Care, Community Service, Health Education, Infection & Hazard Control, … Other Health Licensing programs Dental Hygiene Director, Faculty, etc. Features: Ease of Use, Assess Competencies, Feedback from Instructors, Employment Tool Case Study:Dental Hygiene
Social Networking “Stickiness” with Web 2.0 Technology Ali Jafari, IUPUI
Interoperability ePortfolio IMS Data Standards Academic Technology K-20 student information systems Learning Management Systems Job Posting Sites
Institutional Benefits • DATA AGGREGATION • ACCREDITATION • PROGRAM REVIEW • GOALS & STANDARDS
http://teachingcommons.cdl.edu/eportfolio/resources/index.htmlhttp://teachingcommons.cdl.edu/eportfolio/resources/index.html
Process-Based Approach • Collect • Select • Reflect • Build/Link • Publish • Share
. http://pedroarista.sfsu.efolioworld.com
Assessment for Learning Continuum Learning Accountability * Reflection Standardized Tests Informal Feedback Performance Based Rubrics Portfolios * Observation Stefanakis, Evangeline (2002) Multiple Intelligences and Portfolios. Portsmouth: Heinemann, p. 136
Levels of Mapping Kevin Kelly, SF State
Levels of Mapping – An example Kevin Kelly, SF State
Summary • Focus both on the product and the process. • ePortfolios serve many functions for individual students and faculty, as well as for programs, departments, campuses, and outside organizations. • Institutions are beginning to look at how to map ePortfolio artifacts to objectives at different levels.
Additional Resources: http://eportfolio.sfsu.edu http://teachingcommons.cdl.edu/eportfolio http://eportfolio.merlot.org