Portfolios Assessment Strategies College of Saint Mary Faculty Inservice August 13, 2003
SELECTION not Collection History Why Assessment FOR Learning HLC Recommendations Assessment portfolios can support learning and change. Types
Examples J Griffin EDU 201 J Griffin R Coenen SENIOR R Coenen
Agenda Design and develop portfolio requirements for your program/course by: Identifying purposes and outcomes Identifying a framework for the portfolio design Match portfolio outcomes with potential artifacts Design portfolio evaluation plan
Show growth over time CANNOT be thrown together at the end of term REFLECTION essential
Step 1 What should students know and value? Identify outcomes Use page
What will it look like? Professional presentation Binder? Digital? Other?
Senior Professional Portfolio
Step 2 What will your portfolio look like? Explore contexts, types, frameworks and strategies for portfolio design Use page
Components Assignments Scholarly papers Projects Tests Required/Non-required Reflection Other Education Program Portfolio
Step 3 What will be included in portfolio? Match portfolio outcomes with potential artifacts Use page
Critical Friend Activity FOCUS ON RELEVANCE, APPLICABILITY, AND POSSIBILIITIES EXAMPLES YOU CAN ALSO ADDRESS X WITH THAT… THIS COULD ALSO BE COMBINED WITH … THIS MIGHT ALLOW YOUR STUDENTS TO UNDERSTAND NO NEGATIVE JUDGMENTS FOCUS ON QUESTIONS AND CONFUSIONS EXAMPLES I DON’T UNDERSTAND…. WHY DID YOU….? COULD X HAVE A NEGATIVE EFFECT ON?
Step 4 How will the portfolio be evaluated? Criteria clear to instructors AND students from beginning Rubric Checklist Peer Review Faculty Review
Student Self-Assessment Students are active participants in learning Students identify strengths and weaknesses Weaknesses become goals for improvement