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If it is a special program, ... Blended learning technologies you use including online course materials, ... What will be the first page your audience will see? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Main Title Here


1
  • Main Title Here
  • Introduction Why build an ePortfolio?
  • An ePortfolio is a purposeful collection of work
    that is posted online to A) represents an
    individual's or organization's efforts, progress
    and achievements over time, B) indicates evidence
    of the attainment of knowledge, skills and
    attitudes, C) represent self-reflection
    concerning personal perspectives and
    philosophies, D) facilitate life-long learning
    and career development.
  • An ePortfolio is tangible proof of your work and
    abilities. It can help you demonstrate and
    effectively document your knowledge,
    achievements, and skills. Constructing an
    ePortfolio can also improve your technical skills
    through using interactive multimedia artifacts
    and software. The following are some of the
    advantages of assembling an ePortfolio
  • Functionality
  • -

2
  • Functionality
  • ePortfolios can be seen as a low-cost digital
    repository that allows easy access to one's data,
    files, and resources. This feature can also help
    users to backup their files in case of emergency.
    Because of their low cost, ease of use, and
    practicality, portfolios can be considered a very
    functional tool to use for different purposes,
    anywhere, anytime. ePortfolios also can be easily
    constructed, customized, and shared which add
    more efficiency to them. In addition, users of
    ePortfolios can modify the contents of the
    digital portfolio to meet specific goals and
    manage access to different interested viewers
    such as employers, instructors, learners, or
    colleagues. ePortfolios allow users to present
    and organize their artifacts in a wide range of
    media types such as texts, images, links, files,
    audio and video clips. All these artifacts can be
    easily linked together and with other content in
    the ePortfolio. For example, "a student can link
    a piece of work to a statement describing a
    particular curriculum standard and to an
    explanation of why the piece of work meets that
    standard" (Helen Barrett).
  • -

3
  • Personal and Professional Development
  • An ePortfolio has great potential for improving
    professional development and success by
    demonstrating and tracking an individual's growth
    and progress over time. It is an effective
    approach to maximize self-awareness by
    identifying and underlining one's strengths and
    weaknesses. Furthermore, creating an ePortfolio
    can be an effective way to shape or empower the
    owner's personal and professional advancement
    towards his or her own standards.
  • Photos.com image 1749767

4
  • Collaboration
  • ePortfolios are considered a powerful integrative
    environment where learners can expand their
    knowledge, exchange their ideas, and provide
    assistance or feedback to each other. They
    establish engaging and productive spaces to help
    the owners to work collaboratively and share
    formal or informal information in multiple
    interactive ways. Such an instructional
    environment can help to enhance learners'
    engagement, motivation, and positive attitudes
    toward learning. Further, by providing effective
    collaborative tools (e.g. social networking
    tools, group communication tools, forums),
    ePortfolios help to increase communication and
    social interaction across various disciplines and
    media.

5
  • Assessment Reflection
  • ePortfolios play a great role in promoting the
    owners' assessment and reflection on each others
    work as well as their own. Employers, for
    example, can utilize ePortfolios to evaluate
    their employees' performance, skills, and
    expertise. In educational context, however,
    teachers can use ePortfolio to observe their
    students' achievement and growth during the
    learning process. By doing so, teachers can
    measure their students competency and provide
    any needed support. Moreover, through providing
    reflective spaces and practices, ePortfolios can
    help to improve the learners' self-assessment
    skills, to demonstrate their weaknesses and
    strengths, and to take ownership of their own
    learning.

6
  • Dynamic Personal Learning Environment
  • ePortfolios provide unique avenues for promoting
    deep learning and skill building opportunities
    for their developers. They offer a
    technology-enhanced environment for the users to
    collaborate, share, engage, inspire, exhibit, and
    reflect. ePortfolios also present a rich setting
    for learners to make connections between their
    own prior knowledge and new knowledge or between
    other people's different learning experiences. By
    displaying knowledge in multiple media,
    ePortfolios can support and reach the needs of
    all learners in several interactive ways. Owners
    of ePortfolios can potentially have access to
    different private and public digital resources
    offered in many virtual communities. In addition,
    they can utilize various multimedia tools to
    build new skills or improve existing ones such as
    technical, communication, or goal setting skills.

7
  • What to include in an ePortfolio?
  • ePortfolio Components
  • In order to determine what to include in your
    ePortfolio, you need to first identify your
    ePortfolio purpose, type, and audience. These
    factors should always be considered when deciding
    on which content to include. For example, the
    contents of your ePortfolio will vary depending
    on your primary audiences and how you want to
    present yourself to them. However, generally,
    there are no specific rules on what to include in
    your ePortfolio, yet certain components and
    features are essential.

8
  • Biography
  • An ePortfolio, and your biography in particular,
    gives you a simple and practical opportunity to
    represent yourself effectively. Biography is
    basically a brief, easy-to-read, narrative
    version of your resume, but with more emphases on
    your personality. The components of your bio
    typically begin with your basic information such
    as your name, contact info, email address, and
    your current occupation. Your biography should
    have a description of your educational background
    such as where and when you went to school and
    what degrees you earned. It should also contain
    personal information such as your place of birth,
    and where you currently reside. Besides stating
    your current work position, a summarized
    description of your professional background,
    experiences, and accomplishments should also be
    provided (note that biography is usually written
    in the third person). In this section of your
    ePortfolio, you could share a brief personal
    narrative about your interests, activities, life,
    and family. While it is very important to
    highlight your major skills, awards,
    achievements, and qualifications, it is even more
    important to document your development and update
    your biography regularly.

9
  • Educational Background
  • In this section, you should include a brief
    description of your educational background and
    academic training. Your educational
    qualifications should be listed in reverse
    chronological order starting from most recent to
    least recent. For each entry in your educational
    list, you should provide the name and location of
    institutions you have attended, your degrees,
    majors, minors, and the actual or anticipated
    date of graduation (month and year). To show your
    academic excellence, list honors, awards,
    training certificates, publications, professional
    licenses, conferences, workshops, study abroad
    programs, internships, and scholarships. In
    addition, you could include any relevant
    projects, coursework, testimonials, GPA scores,
    transcripts, continuing education, major test
    results, presentations, and professional
    affiliations and memberships.

10
  • Professional Experience
  • This part of your ePortfolio should consist of
    your professional background, goals, and skills.
    It should also convey how your experiences and
    skills are well suited to your professional goals
    and to the careers you are seeking. Since it is
    preferable to use a reverse chronological order
    when listing your jobs, you always should start
    listing your most recent position and work
    experience to the oldest. For each position,
    include the names and locations of employing
    organizations, job titles, dates of employment
    (month/year), references, their contact
    information, and your job's duties and
    responsibilities. Use bullet points-description
    when illustrating your job's duties and
    accomplishments. Try to use a consistent and
    simple style and layout to make this section easy
    to read and review as possible.

11
  • A strong ePortfolio should successfully express
    your objectives and expertise. Therefore, you
    should identify and highlight your professional
    goals and demonstrate skills related to your
    previous or current careers. Articulate precisely
    what do you stand for? What do you aspire to do
    with your career? Where do you see yourself in
    two to five years? What are some of your
    strengths? And, what are your short-term and
    long-term goals? As well as your educational
    background, you need to emphasize your abilities
    and knowledge. Document certificates of any
    additional training and workshops, certification
    of technical skills, awards and honors, a scanned
    copy of your resume, your transcript, volunteer
    work and community services, major projects,
    publications, internships, leadership,
    communication, public speaking, foreign language
    skills, and any conferences or seminars you have
    attended.

12
  • Performance and Skills
  • To make your ePortfolio stand out from the
    others, it is important to display evidence of
    your performance and skills. Therefore, your
    ePortfolio should consist of a detailed
    examination of your skills therefore, you should
    state the name of the skill area the knowledge
    or personal traits that contribute to your
    success in that skill area your background and
    specific experiences that demonstrate your
    application of the skill tamu.edu. Besides
    illustrating your education and professional
    skills, including your personal and
    extracurricular skills can greatly boost the
    effectiveness of your ePortfolio. However, you
    should always keep your ePortfolio's purpose and
    audience in mind when deciding what activities to
    include. Examples of good personal and
    extracurricular activities include voluntary
    work, technical skills, writing skills,
    internships, study abroad, communication skills,
    teaching, public speaking, personal learning
    activities, foreign languages skills, sports
    participation, military service, clubs
    involvement, leadership positions, and
    professional affiliations or memberships.

13
  • Evidence of competencies
  • Regardless of your ePortfolio's purpose and type,
    you should always include evidence of your
    competence in your area of expertise. By doing
    so, you can effectively represent the various
    levels of your attainment and illustrate a wide
    range of your skills, knowledge, and abilities to
    your ePortfolio's viewers (e.g. Prospective
    employers, clients, teachers, colleagues, etc.).
    Samples of your work can be in various formats
    and media types such as text files, images,
    links, graphics, audio clips, video clips,
    electronic presentations, documents, database
    projects, and other multimedia formats. Each
    sample of work in your ePortfolio is called an
    artifact. All of the artifacts included should
    have a purpose, overview of goals, social
    importance, and expected learning outcomes. To
    make your ePortfolio more meaningful, you should
    associate reflections with your artifacts to
    demonstrate and deepen your understanding and
    growth over time in each domain. Depending on
    your ePortfolio's type, your artifacts should
    either display your best work, demonstrate your
    development and growth over time, document you
    progress for assessment purposes, or all of that.
    Therefore, your reflection should be based on the
    objectives, standards, and the expected learning
    outcomes of your artifacts or the whole
    ePortfolio. Reflect particularly on what you have
    learned and how your work illustrates the
    learning outcomes. Use self-assessment tools to
    analyze your own progress in the process of
    learning. Examples of artifacts include
    publications, electronic presentations, audio and
    video projects, assignments, research papers,
    writing samples, a copy of your resume as well as
    any other materials that can be added to your
    ePortfolio to represent your knowledge and show a
    proof of your proficiency.

14
  • Philosophical Statements
  • The philosophy that guides your use of
    educational technology goes here. By identifying
    continuously examining, testifying, and verifying
    your philosophy you will foster your professional
    and personal growth. Your philosophy is a
    personal statement about your evolving beliefs
    that includes your conception of teaching and
    learning, a description of how best to integrate
    technology in your teaching, and a justification
    for why you use educational technology. A
    meaningful philosophy demonstrates that you are
    purposeful and reflective about your teaching and
    that you are able to articulate your goals and
    actions.

15
  • Awards and Honors
  • Since ePortfolios are mainly used to represent
    your capabilities and competence in your field,
    you should include collections of any honors and
    kudos received awards and accolades won
    certificates and training taken and promotions
    or performance appraisals given. Memberships in
    professional or educational organizations you
    have had, as well as conferences, seminars, and
    workshops you have attended can also be included.
    In addition, you may want to contain a list of
    your recognitions, credentials, scholarships,
    published works, commissions, and accomplishments.

16
  • Home or Front Page
  • Some of the aforementioned components can be
    placed in the front page of your ePortfolio,
    which may be called the 'Home' or 'About Me'
    page. In this page, you can articulate the
    purpose of your ePortfolio by giving an overview
    of what your site is about and a bit about what
    potential visitors will find in your ePortfolio.
    To make your ePortfolio more interesting to view,
    you can include some appropriate academic or
    personal photos and graphics.

17
  • ePortfolio in Education
  • Student Portfolio
  • ePortfolios allow students to reflect on their
    learning, communicate with instructors, document
    credentials, or provide potential employers with
    examples of their work.
  • A student ePortfolio could be for college,
    potential internships, or a job after college. No
    matter when you create one, you should
    continually update it as you grow and acquire
    skills, knowledge, and experience. Building a
    high quality ePortfolio will take time and effort
    so it is much easier to keep it up to date as you
    improve yourself. You should take control of your
    ePortfolio and include pieces of work or
    accomplishments that you are proud of. Add your
    favorite pieces of work from classes, work, or
    just personal time as you create them to avoid
    forgetting them later on down the road. Since an
    ePortfolio can contain almost anything, it is
    great way to show off what is important to you
    and highlight your best skills or talents you
    possess.
  • As an added benefit, ePortfolios provide an
    opportunity for the student and faculty to
    reflect on the students skills and achievements.
    By keeping your ePortfolio up to date, you will
    gain a greater understanding of your personal
    growth, which can aid in career planning,
    building a resume, and setting goals. A great
    ePortfolio will make great strides in taking you
    wherever you decide to go by being memorable and
    not only demonstrating the quality of your work
    and level of skill, but will also exhibit in
    demand skills such as professionalism, technical
    knowhow, organizational skill, creativity, and
    dedication to your craft.

18
  • Building a Student ePortfolio
  • When building an ePortfolio, you should always
    consider the audience. Are you applying for
    college? Perhaps you would like to just share
    your work with a faculty member. Attempt to
    tailor your ePortfolio to your audience by
    highlighting the specific skills you wish to show
    off. If you are applying to college, what is your
    intended major? If it is a special program, what
    skills do you want to show you have to be
    developed? If you are preparing to find a job or
    internship what specific skills are required in
    the intended field?
  • You may include
  • Resume Information
  • Your educational background.
  • Your work experience.
  • Your progress toward a degree including
    coursework.
  • Personal Belief Statements
  • Your philosophy of education.
  • Why you decided to become a teacher.
  • Reflections on what you have learned.
  • How you will integrate technology into your
    teaching.
  • Your teaching goals
  • Web sites and reading that reflect your
    philosophy of teaching
  • Personal statements for how you will implement
    educational standards related to your teaching
    areas

19
  • Organizing
  • Before attempting to delve into the task of
    building a complete ePortfolio, it is necessary
    to take time to outline and organize your ideas.
    Know your audience and what pieces you want to
    highlight. List the pieces you will include.
    Decide on an overarching theme and style. What
    will be the first page your audience will see?
    What will your layout be like? How will divide up
    the content? Is it too confusing or unintuitive
    to navigate? These are important questions you
    must address before creating an ePortfolio. There
    may be times, significant life events like
    graduation, which you will have to create a new
    or overhaul an old ePortfolio. These large-scale
    changes will be much easier done on paper than in
    your actual ePortfolio.
  • Faculty Portfolio
  • A Faculty ePortfolio is a place where a teacher
    can showcase their style and teaching ability in
    a public and professional manner. An ePortfolio
    can serve many purposes for faculty. They may be
    looking for a job or up for tenure and need a
    showcase for their abilities, used to share
    knowledge and collaborate between colleagues or
    peers, or as with any ePortfolio can be built for
    personal reflection and growth. A well-built
    ePortfolio will benefit the teacher and their
    students as it is a great way to document past
    endeavors and successes and reflect on what went
    poorly or well. It allows the teacher to refine
    their philosophies accordingly and to continue to
    experiment and grow as a teacher.
  • An ePortfolio is a living document that must be
    continually updated in an effort to showcase
    ones best work. The emphasis is always on
    quality not quantity. Always, the materials
    should be carefully selected to demonstrate your
    own personal style and best works. A carelessly
    put together ePortfolio can do as much damage as
    a well thought out one can aid in success.

20
  • Building a Faculty ePortfolio
  • A Faculty ePortfolio should contain documentation
    of your teaching practices. It should never stop
    growing, but it may need to be trimmed as well to
    avoid becoming a massive pile of all your work
    that does not demonstrate your growth and
    reflection. Again, the emphasis should be on your
    best accomplishments and achievements.
  • You may include
  • Your education philosophy and teaching goals.
  • Lesson plans, curricula, or assignments.
  • Videos of classes.
  • Documentation of your teaching success or
    achievements.
  • Reflections and what you have learned from
    previous efforts.
  • Any applicable published works or research.
  • Past evaluations by supervisors.
  • Organizing
  • ePortfolios should be easy to navigate and have
    an overarching theme and style. Decide ahead of
    time what artifacts you will include and how they
    will fit together and be presented. Avoid piling
    everything together on a page. Instead present
    the most important pieces and personal reflection
    on each. Decide what will be immediately noticed
    upon arriving at the first page of an ePortfolio.
    How will users navigate your ePortfolio? Again,
    remember to keep it simple and highlight what you
    are most proud of.

21
  • Other Types of ePortfolios
  • Working ePortfolio (Working, Developmental,
    Process, or Growth ePortfolio)
  • A working ePortfolio is used to show evidence of
    growth and skill development over time. The
    process of the learning is emphasized in the
    working ePortfolio more than the product. The
    items represented in the working ePortfolio are
    mainly a collection of all pieces that the owner
    has developed along with their reflection in
    relation to a specific project, for example,
    early and late samples of one's work throughout a
    school year. This type of ePortfolio is used to
    convey the owners strengths and weaknesses and
    keep track of their advancement of a specific
    skill that they acquired during the learning
    period.

22
  • Assessment ePortfolio (Assessment, Reflective, or
    Learning ePortfolio)
  • An assessment ePortfolio is used to examine
    competencies and progress towards specific
    standards or goals. Assessment ePortfolios
    developers are expected to reflect on the
    intended learning outcomes of their artifacts.
    The owners are also allowed to receive feedback
    or suggestions from their ePortfolios viewers.
    One of the important aims for this type of
    ePortfolio is to document the achievement of the
    owners for grading and evaluating purposes.

23
  • Showcase ePortfolio (Showcase, Display, Best
    Work, or Representational ePortfolio)
  • A showcase ePortfolio is used to display one's
    best work and performance in particular areas.
    This type of ePortfolio highlights the product of
    the learning more than the process. The showcase
    ePortfolio is usually shared to show the best
    evidence of an individual's work such as sharing
    an ePortfolio with potential employers as a job
    resume or with a teacher to evaluate the overall
    achievement at the end of the semester.

24
  • Hybrids
  • Most portfolios are hybrids of the three types of
    portfolios listed above. Rarely will you find a
    portfolio that is strictly used for assessment,
    development or showcase purposes. Occasionally,
    you may come across showcase portfolios that do
    not show evidence of self-reflection, rubrics for
    assessment or feedback, however, as Helen
    Barrett, an expert in the field of e-portfolios,
    would say "a portfolio without standards, goals
    and/or reflection is just a fancy resume, not an
    electronic portfolio."

25
  • Professional ePortfolio
  • This type of ePortfolios allow job seekers to
    demonstrate their skills and capabilities to
    prospective employers by presenting official
    evidence of their best work. Therefore, it is
    especially important to demonstrate one's
    qualifications and credentials when constructing
    an ePortfolio. In addition, an ePortfolio is an
    effective way to exhibit ones professional and
    personal development that he or she has obtained
    over time. Creating an ePortfolio can also help
    keep one's resume current by managing and
    organizing his or her progress and artifacts.
    Employers will often use ePortfolios to identify
    the best candidate for a particular job.

26
  • Personal ePortfolio
  • A personal ePortfolio is an online private
    portfolio where one can document, create, share,
    and communicate in a virtual environment.

27
  • Project ePortfolio
  • A project ePortfolio documents information,
    goals, and results of a specific study.

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