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Academic Portfolios

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Title: Academic Portfolios


1
Academic Portfolios
  • Collection, Selection, Reflection, Evaluation and
    Presentation

Workshop 1 Victoria McGillin, Ph.D., Associate
Provost JoAnn Barbour, Ph.D., Professor
2
The Academic Career Universe Old Model
TEACHING
SCHOLARSHIP
SERVICE
3
Contemporary Academic Career Model
TEACHING
RESEARCH
SERVICE
4
TEACHING
RESEARCH
SERVICE

Your Philosophy
5
Portfolios
  • Obviously, an academic portfolio is
  • A factual narrative or presentation of an
    academics strengths and accomplishments in
    scholarship, teaching and service
  • An academics reflections on and evaluation of
    her/his accomplishments or work in progress in
    light of his/her philosophical position
  • A collection of documents and materials selected
    to collectively suggest the scope and quality of
    a professors performance.
  • Examples of best work and important
    accomplishments (via documentation or a one-page
    synopsis of such)
  • All documentation directly linked to the
    narrative through specific references in the
    narrative's text

6
Portfolios
  • Less obviously
  • Portfolios provide for an intentional focus on
    learning and assessment of ones teaching,
    scholarship/creative works and service as well as
    how and why they are being perfected
  • Provides structure for ones teaching/evolution
  • Did it really lead to enhanced student learning?
  • How can it be improved, given your philosophy?
  • Provides structure for ones scholarship/evolution
  • Is it significantly contributing to the field?
  • If not, how can it be changed?
  • Provides structure for ones service
  • Are you making a difference?
  • If not, how can it be changed?

7
Portfolios
  • Are living, breathing documents
  • Allow for deliberate and systematic attention to
    ones work
  • Annually updated with each update of CV
  • Add items reflect on changes document those
    changes remove items less relevant

8
Portfolios
  • Are holistic/systemic
  • Portfolios as whole picture of you as an academic
  • Tie your philosophy/goals to your practices and
    your outcomes
  • Scholar/Artist
  • Teacher
  • Member of an Academic Community

9
Portfolios Goals (Adapted from D. Mihram, USC)
10
TWU Portfolio Expectations
  • The TWU Academic Portfolio is composed of two
    parts
  • Required University Documentation
  • Supportive Evidence (50 page limit)

11
TWU Portfolio Expectation
  • Required University Documentation
  • Recommendations from PRC, Component
    administrator, Dean, University PT Committee
  • Curriculum Vitae TWU Format
  • Letters from external reviewers (as of 2008)
  • Annual reviews

12
TWU Portfolio Expectation
  • Supportive Evidence (Reflections
    Documentation) (50 pages)
  • Introductory narrative integrating teaching,
    research service
  • Your rationale for your overall work as an
    academic the assumptions and beliefs that
    underlie in common your teaching,
    scholarship/creative works and service your
    goals, to enable assessment of your progress
  • Teaching narrative and documentation
  • Your rationale for your practices the
    assumptions and beliefs underlying your teaching
    your goals, to enable assessment of your progress
    (Adapted from B. Schwartz, Randolph Macon Womans
    College)
  • Scholarship/creativity narrative and
    documentation
  • Your rationale for your practices the
    assumptions and beliefs underlying your
    scholarly/creative work your goals, to enable
    assessment of your progress
  • Service narrative and documentation
  • Your rationale for your practices the
    assumptions and beliefs underlying your service
    to the department, college, university, region,
    profession your goals, to enable assessment of
    your progress

13

Collection
Selection
Presentation
Evaluation
Reflection
14
  • Collection

Presentation
Selection
Philosophy
Evaluation
Reflection
15
Key Points Collection
  • Compile the supporting data
  • Student work, publications or exhibitions, grants
  • Teaching evaluations, grants awarded, service
    recognitions
  • Students, professional peers, colleagues
  • Summarize responsibilities, priorities, and
    interests in areas of teaching,
    scholarship/creative activities, and service
  • Courses taught, whether they are graduate or
    undergraduate, required or elective
  • Teaching-related activities (e.g., serving as
    faculty advisor to student organizations,
    advising individual graduate or undergraduate
    students).
  • Membership in groups and leadership roles

16
Collection (cont.)
  • Prepare statements on key selected items
  • Statements on activities, initiatives, and
    accomplishments on each item
  • Do the syllabi of courses coalesce around a
    specific theme about your teaching?
  • Have you participated in programs, colloquia, or
    seminars designed to improve teaching?
  • Do you have a variety of measures of your
    teaching effectiveness? Back-up documentation and
    appendices are referenced as appropriate.

17
Key Points Selection
  • Summarize responsibilities
  • What courses do you teach? Scholarly/creative
    work completed? Service commitments?
  • What courses have you taught? Scholarly/creative
    work put before peers/public in the past? Service
    accomplished?
  • Include all related responsibilities
  • Note A one-page synopsis is an effective option
    for reporting activities for which other forms of
    documentation are not available.
  • A synopsis is a self-reported summary containing
    a detailed description of the nature of your
    important contributions and accomplishments in a
    particular area of work or achievement.
  • A 1-page synopsis, for example, can describe in
    detail the extent and nature of your
    contributions and leadership while in the role of
    chair of a particular committee or task force.
  • One can use a one-page synopsis in all three
    areas when other forms of generally accepted
    evidence do not exist.

18
Selection (cont.)
  • Select items for your portfolio
  • What is most applicable
  • To your teaching responsibilities and your
    approach to teaching?
  • To your scholarly accomplishments?
  • To your service achievements?
  • Select items which are most applicable
  • Choice of items should also reflect the
    professors personal preferences, style, academic
    discipline, and particular work.

19
Selection (cont.)
  • Compile the supporting data
  • Evidence supporting all items mentioned in the
    portfolio e.g., original student evaluation of
    teaching, samples of student scholarship,
    invitations to contribute articles, colleagues
    evaluations.
  • Note Such evidence is not part of the portfolio
    but is back-up material placed in the appendix or
    made available upon request.

20
Key Points Reflection
  • Describe your approach to teaching,
    scholarship/creative activities, and service
    and/or
  • Write reflective statement(s) about your research
    agenda, creative endeavors, service foci, and
    teaching, strategies, methodologies and
    objectives in the form of one or several
    philosophy statements.
  • The most valuable reflective statements include
    examples of research and scholarship, creative
    activities, service opportunities and/or
    classroom practices which show how ones
    practice, choices, activities, and/or methods fit
    his or her aims as an academic.

21
Reflection (cont.)
  • Describe your approach to teaching
  • Teaching philosophy, strategies, methodologies,
    objectives.
  • Answer the question Why you do what you do in
    the classroom?
  • Prepare statements on each item
  • How does your syllabus illustrate your teaching?
  • Do you have multiple measures of teaching
    effectiveness?
  • Describe your approach to research, scholarly
    activities and/or creative activities
  • Philosophy, strategies, methodologies, objectives
  • Answer the question Why you do what you do in
    the research/scholarship/creative activity area?
  • What is your agenda for this area? What line of
    inquiry?
  • How does what you do influence what/how you
    teach? Serve others?
  • Have you integrated your research/scholarship and
    creative activities with teaching and service?

22
Reflection (cont.)
  • Describe your approach to service
  • Philosophy, strategies of service and focus of
    service.
  • Answer the questions Why do you choose to serve
    in particular arenas, whether at the local,
    state, national and/or international levels? Why
    do you choose particular activities?
  • Over time, what is your agenda for service? What
    do you hope to accomplish by your service
    activities? Is there an area in which you wish
    to focus your energies? Why?
  • Do your service commitments influence what/how
    you teach? In what way(s)? Do your service
    activities influence and inform your
    research/scholarship/creative activities? How?

23
Key Points Presentation
  • Arrange the order of the items
  • The sequence of the accomplishments in each area
    is determined by their intended use (e.g., to
    demonstrate teaching improvement entries that
    reflect that goal should be stressed -- such as
    participation in seminars and workshops designed
    to enhance classroom performance).
  • Align your Reflection/Documentation with your CV
  • The sequence of accomplishments is also
    determined by the TWU outline
  • Recommendation forms (PRC, Chair, Dean,
    University PT Committee)
  • CV
  • Letters of External Reviewers (in 2008)
  • Reflection Documentation
  • Annual reviews (in chronological order)

24
Key Points Evaluation
  • Evaluation by Self Determine how successful you
    are in achieving your intended outcomes in
    teaching, scholarship, and service See
    philosophy statements.
  • Use an assessment tool and/or check sheet to
    determine if you have accomplished the key points
    of Collection, Selection, Reflection,
    Presentation and Evaluation.
  • Evaluation by Others Determine if you
    understood/utilized the appropriate criteria from
  • Component Review
  • University review

25
Preview of Coming Attractions
  • Workshop II
  • Reflection Writing the Philosophy Statements
  • Assessment Evaluation of Academic Portfolios
  • Workshop III
  • Collection, Selection Presentation of Academic
    Portfolios
  • Teaching
  • Service
  • Scholarship Creative Activity

26
Questions?
  • Is this what you needed to know?
  • What information/resource/opportunities do you
    need?
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