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Digital Professional Portfolios: Pathways to Professional Development

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Multimedia presentation and examination of digital teaching portfolios. DTP Commandments ... the commercial paper held by a financial house (as a bank) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Digital Professional Portfolios: Pathways to Professional Development


1
Digital Teaching Portfolios Pathways to
Professional Development
Natalie B. Milman, Ph.D. nmilman_at_gwu.edu The
George Washington University
2
Todays Agenda
  • Overview/Introductions/Creation of a KWL Chart
    about digital teaching portfolios
  • Multimedia presentation and examination of
    digital teaching portfolios
  • DTP Commandments
  • Presentation/activity/discussion Portfolio
    development process and standards
  • Presentation and dialogue about digital tools for
    creating digital teaching portfolios
  • Revisiting the KWL chart and considering what was
    learned

3
Introductions
  • Describe name and position
  • Describe your experience with portfolios (if
    any--in general and/or digital portfolios)
  • Complete KWL chart (K-W parts only)

4
portfolio (pOrt-'fO-lE-"O)
  • a hinged cover or flexible case for carrying
    loose papers, pictures, or pamphlets,
  • from the use of such a case to carry documents
    of state the office and functions of a minister
    of state or member of a cabinet, and
  • the securities held by an investor the
    commercial paper held by a financial house (as a
    bank) a set of pictures (as drawings or
    photographs) either bound in book form or loose
    in a folder.

5
What is a portfolio?
  • A portfolio is a goal-driven, organized,
    collection of materials that demonstrates a
    person's expansion of knowledge and skills over
    time.
  • The contents, organization, and presentation of
    materials in portfolios vary depending on their
    audience and purpose.

6
Types of portfolios
  • Working Portfolios
  • Descriptive
  • Learning
  • Presentation Portfolios
  • Assessment
  • Class
  • Employment
  • Professional
  • Showcase
  • Teaching

7
What are teaching portfolios?
  • Special type of presentation portfolio
  • Contain artifacts from teaching
  • Demonstrate deliberate selection, reflection, and
    communication revolving around the artifacts
  • Illustrate a professionals recognition of
    personal competence

8
Critical attributes of teaching portfolios
  • "structured documentary history of a set of
    coached or mentored acts of teaching,
    substantiated by samples of student portfolios,
    and fully realized only through reflective
    writing, deliberation, and conversation (Shulman
    1998, p. 37).
  • Shulman, L. (1998). Teacher portfolios A
    theoretical activity. In Lyons, N. (Ed.), With
    portfolio in hand Validating the new teacher
    professionalism (pp. 23-37). New York Teachers
    College Press.

9
What are digital teaching portfolios (DTPs)?
  • Contain the same content traditional portfolios
    include but present these professional materials
    in digital format
  • Also referred to as multimedia portfolios,
    electronic portfolios, e-folios, webfolios, and
    electronically-augmented portfolios

10
Lets look at some! http//home.gwu.edu/nmilman/d
p/kortecamp
  • What elements are common among the DTPs you have
    examined?
  • Which portfolios did you like most? Explain why.
  • Which portfolios did you like least? Explain why.
  • What elements do you think are important to
    include in a portfolio? Why?
  • What are the advantages and disadvantages to
    creating DTPs?
  • Why would you create a digital portfolio as
    opposed to a traditional (print-based) portfolio?

11
DTP Commandments(Kilbane Milman, 2003)
  • When in doubt DON'T throw it out!
  • Do it digital!
  • Be organized, not frustrated!
  • Log it or lose it!
  • If it is nice, save it thrice!
  • Be careful, not sorry!
  • Give credit where credit is due!
  • Do unto others as you would have done unto you.
  • Create and stick to a timeline!

12
What is the DTP development process?
  • 1. Planning the portfolio Focus frame
  • 2. Considering portfolio contents Collect,
    select, reflect
  • 3. Designing the portfolio Organize produce
  • 4. Evaluating the portfolio Perform formative
    summative evaluation
  • 5. Publishing the portfolio

13
Stage 1 Planning the DTP
  • Focusing the portfolio - determine the purpose
    of the portfolio and its intended audience.
    (RATIONALE)
  • Who is my audience?
  • Why am I creating a portfolio?

14
Stage 1 Planning the DTP (contd)
  • Framing - determine how to create continuity
    among the various components of the portfolio.
    (FRAMEWORK)
  • How can I create continuity? (theme,
    standards/domains, question)

15
Which frameworks could be used?
  • Praxis III Domains
  • Professional Standards
  • State
  • INTASC (beginning teachers)
  • NBPTS (experienced teachers)
  • Technology
  • ISTE (National)
  • State

16
Stage 2 Considering DTP Contents
Collect
Select
Reflect
17
What items should be collected?
  • Artifacts
  • An artifact is tangible evidence that indicates
    the attainment of knowledge and skills and the
    ability to apply understandings to complex tasks
    (Campbell, Melenyzer, Nettles Wyman, 2000, p.
    147).

18
Artifact examples
  • Educational philosophy statement
  • Résumé
  • Classroom management plan
  • Professional development plan
  • Student portfolios
  • Photos
  • Lesson plans
  • Seating charts

19
What items should be collected/created?
  • Supporting documentation
  • Items that do not fit into artifact definition.
    Such items provide information about the
    person/portfolio, but are not artifacts.

20
Supporting documentation examples
  • Table of contents
  • Authorship statement
  • Credits
  • Rationale or introductory statement
  • Dedication

21
Selection guidelines
  • Examine as many artifacts as possible (i.e.,
    lesson plans, student work samples, etc.)
  • Determine which artifacts support the framework
    by asking the following questions about each
    artifact

22
Selection guidelines (contd)
  • Does this artifact/item meet the criteria for
    which I am framing my portfolio? How?
  • Is this artifact/item the best example(s) I can
    use for demonstrating these criteria? If so, why?
    If not, why not?
  • Should I include this artifact/item in my
    portfolio? Why? Why not?

23
Selection guidelines (contd)
  • Create a chart of the artifacts, how they
    correlate with your framework, and how they rate
    (i.e., definitely include or maybe)

24
Stage 2 Reflecting
  • A digital portfolio without reflection is just
    a multimedia presentation, or a fancy electronic
    résumé, or a digital scrapbook (Barrett, 2000)

25
Reflection is...
  • "a drawing together of long strands of
    connections, the weaving together of experiences,
    theory, and practices into meaning for the
    individual teacher and a kind of construction of
    knowledge a knowledge of teaching practice"
    (Lyons, 1998, p. 106).

26
Reflective questioning
  • How does this artifact demonstrate competence in
    a particular standard?
  • Why did I include this artifact (why is it
    important to me)?
  • What did I learn as a result of using/creating
    this artifact?
  • How would I do things differently as a result of
    the artifact?

27
Stage 3 Designing the Portfolio
  • Organizing
  • Creating a table of contents (TOC)
  • Putting artifacts into different categories in
    the TOC
  • Creating storyboard
  • Creating a design grid (layout of web pages)

28
Stage 3 Designing the Portfolio
  • Before Producing - Consider
  • Skills
  • Portfolio development process
  • Resources (Software, Hardware, People)
  • Need to digitize artifacts
  • Time

29
Stage 3 Designing the Portfolio
  • Producing
  • Transforming artifacts and supporting
    documentation into digital format
  • Creating, testing, and building the portfolio
    from a template

30
Stage 4 Evaluating the Portfolio
  • Conducting both formative and summative
    evaluation (involve critical friends in the
    process)
  • Revising the portfolio

31
Stage 5 Publishing the Portfolio
  • FTP to WWW
  • Save on CD, DVD, Zip disk
  • Print a Hard copy
  • SHARING of portfolio with students, colleagues,
    administrators, professors

32
How do I develop a DTP?
  • Integrative approach
  • Turnkey approach
  • Stand-alone software

33
Which tools are available for creating a DTP?
  • Integrative approach
  • Adobe Acrobat
  • Macromedia Dreamweaver
  • Microsoft PowerPoint

34
Which tools are available for creating a DTP?
  • Turnkey approach
  • Chalk Wire
  • LiveText
  • Taskstream

35
Factors to consider when selecting tools for
creating DTPs
  • Technical skills
  • Availability
  • Difficulty
  • Support
  • Transferability
  • Support for various media formats

36
Factors to consider when selecting tools for
creating DTPs (contd)
  • Multimedia environments
  • Platforms
  • Technical requirements
  • Hardware and software required for viewing
  • Audience skills required for viewing

37
  • What have you learned about digital teaching
    portfolios?

38
References
  • Barrett, H. (2000). Electronic portfolios
    multimedia development portfolio development
    the electronic portfolio development process.
    Retrieved July 23, 2001, from http//www.electroni
    cportfolios.com/portfolios/EPDevProcess.htmlstage
    3
  • Campbell, D.M., Melenyzer, B.J., Nettles, D.H.,
    Wyman, R.M. (2000). Portfolio and performance
    assessment. Boston Allyn Bacon.
  • Council of Chief State School Officers. (1996).
    Interstate School Leaders Licensure Consortium
    Standards For School Leaders. Retrieved December
    1, 2004 from http//www.ccsso.org/content/pdfs/isl
    lcstd.pdf.
  • Kilbane, C.R., Milman, N.B. (2003). The digital
    teaching portfolio handbook A how-to guide for
    educators. Boston Allyn Bacon.
  • Kilbane, C.R., Milman, N.B. (2005). The digital
    teaching portfolio workbook Understanding the
    digital teaching portfolio process. Boston Allyn
    Bacon.
  • Lyons, N. (1998). Grant, G. E., Huebner, T. A.
    (1998). Portfolios and their consequences
    Developing as a reflective practitioner. In
    Lyons, N. (Ed). With portfolio in hand
    Validating the new teacher professionalism (pp.
    23-27). New York Teachers College Press.
  • Shulman, L. (1998). Teacher portfolios A
    theoretical activity. In Lyons, N. (Ed.), With
    portfolio in hand Validating the new teacher
    professionalism (pp. 23-37). New York Teachers
    College Press.
  • U.S. Department of Education. (2000). Building
    bridges The mission principles of professional
    development. Retrieved January 29, 2002, from
    http//www.ed.gov/G2K/bridge.html
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