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Exploring the E-Portfolio: Encouraging Reflection and Transfer Kim Freeman College Writing, UC Berkeley Waves of Innovation, May 5 2016 Definitions: E-Portfolios.

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Presentation on theme: "Exploring the E-Portfolio: Encouraging Reflection and Transfer Kim Freeman College Writing, UC Berkeley Waves of Innovation, May 5 2016 Definitions: E-Portfolios."— Presentation transcript:

1 Exploring the E-Portfolio: Encouraging Reflection and Transfer Kim Freeman College Writing, UC Berkeley Waves of Innovation, May 5 2016 Definitions: E-Portfolios differ from print portfolios in their multimodality and layout. This multimodality benefits students, who are increasingly expected to be able to produce and consume texts with more than alphabetic modes, such as video, blogs, visual essays, as well as data, figures, and graphs. Reflection: The non-linear layout of e-portfolios can foster cognitive differences and depth in reflection; it enables students to juxtapose, curate, and comment on works more thoroughly, enabling, as Randy Bass and Bret Enyon (2009) have put it, creators of e-portfolios to make “the invisible” aspects of learning “visible.” Transfer: Because the e-portfolio is stored on the web, it is available simultaneously in multiple places and to multiple people. Not only is this accessibility helpful in the classroom, where it can be projected and discussed, but it can also be shared with others—fellow students, friends, family, even potential employers or internships, thus increasing student ownership of their work, as well as student awareness of their work’s portability.

2 Assignment Students in CW 161 Writing in the Biological Sciences write multiple projects all semester, revising those projects for a reflective portfolio. This semester students were asked to create an e-portfolio, to design a website in which they “curated” their work, arranging and commenting on it, using the modalities and spatial configurations e-portfolios afford. At its core the assignment asked for four major features: reflection, examples of their best revised work, examples of their writing in progress, and arrangement that is aesthetically pleasing, navigable, and reflective. Further, because the e- portfolio is an emerging genre, we spent time in class coming up with criteria. Students had their choice of free (and private) platforms; they were given this assignment five weeks before the class ended.

3 Outcomes and Projections Plan to incorporate this strategy in other classes, including CW R4B and, potentially, R1A within the coming school year. Help students see how skills transfer from the classroom to other situations. Provide sample assignment and models for other teachers and students, available at the Lecturer Teaching Fellows website (available by June 1, 2016).Lecturer Teaching Fellows Streamline with larger trends in campus technology, such as Suite C. As Greg Niemeyer said at recent ETS workshop—the hope is to provide students with collected work they can take beyond the classroom. Show potential for teachers and reflection, too, with teaching e-portfolios, my example of which will be available at the LTF website, too.


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