This presentation was part of the August 2020 webinar entitled: Employability, employers, and eportfolios and delivered by Kate Mitchell, Tom Cotton and Dr Suneeti Rekhari
Connecting and transforming: Using ePortfolios to support employability and p...ePortfolios Australia
Swinburne University of Technology is involved in a process of transforming learning to ensure that graduates are future-ready learners who have the potential to make a positive impact in the workplace and community. A key part of this strategy is to encourage students to reflect on the skills and graduate attributes they develop as part of their studies and through their involvement in employment and extra-curricular activities. Swinburne are currently piloting an ePortfolio platform (Portfolium) to support and integrate the knowledge and skills developed through a wide range of curricular and co-curricular initiatives to develop an employability portfolio. In particular, the ePortfolio will be used by students to articulate their professional purpose and to collect and curate evidence of their professional purpose journey throughout their course. The presentation will explore the role of ePortfolios at the intersection of strategic initiatives and report on evaluation and future plans for institution-wide implementation.
Using Dashboards to Enhance Authentic Professional Learning Capabilities Dr M...ePortfolios Australia
A key challenge facing commerce students on graduation is the ability to demonstrate industry ready capabilities such as critical analysis, and problem solving (Bolton 2018). To prepare for this challenge, higher education needs to design assessments that prepare students for corporate expectations. However, many students struggle with the presenting the critical analysis needed for commerce assessments. Dashboards are widely used within industry as tools to draw together volumes of information from diverse sources, track performance and make strategic decisions (Grewal, Motyka & Levy 2018; Schlee & Karns 2017). Adapting this idea, we have developed assessment tasks that utilise a dashboard design to help students structure their research, present analysis and develop insight as a way to articulate their professional capabilities. The dashboards are embedded in an early assessment in a first year University commerce course and provide visual layouts that guide students to manage the research and analysis.
This presentation will showcase a micro-credentialing strategy and design principles developed to recognise capabilities, incentivise meaningful achievement and encourage students to reflect on their employability.
A new challenge is on the horizon for the education sector. The AQF is currently under review and the sector is rapidly trying to adapt to the changing needs of industry. Digital/Micro-credentialing and badges may be the answer. In this webinar session we will take a look at what is currently happening around the sector, discuss what the future workforce will look like and the types of learners that education providers will need to produce, what this all means to our current curricula and how ePortfolios could be a perfect tool to help facilitate the credentialing and badging process.
Connecting and transforming: Using ePortfolios to support employability and p...ePortfolios Australia
Swinburne University of Technology is involved in a process of transforming learning to ensure that graduates are future-ready learners who have the potential to make a positive impact in the workplace and community. A key part of this strategy is to encourage students to reflect on the skills and graduate attributes they develop as part of their studies and through their involvement in employment and extra-curricular activities. Swinburne are currently piloting an ePortfolio platform (Portfolium) to support and integrate the knowledge and skills developed through a wide range of curricular and co-curricular initiatives to develop an employability portfolio. In particular, the ePortfolio will be used by students to articulate their professional purpose and to collect and curate evidence of their professional purpose journey throughout their course. The presentation will explore the role of ePortfolios at the intersection of strategic initiatives and report on evaluation and future plans for institution-wide implementation.
Using Dashboards to Enhance Authentic Professional Learning Capabilities Dr M...ePortfolios Australia
A key challenge facing commerce students on graduation is the ability to demonstrate industry ready capabilities such as critical analysis, and problem solving (Bolton 2018). To prepare for this challenge, higher education needs to design assessments that prepare students for corporate expectations. However, many students struggle with the presenting the critical analysis needed for commerce assessments. Dashboards are widely used within industry as tools to draw together volumes of information from diverse sources, track performance and make strategic decisions (Grewal, Motyka & Levy 2018; Schlee & Karns 2017). Adapting this idea, we have developed assessment tasks that utilise a dashboard design to help students structure their research, present analysis and develop insight as a way to articulate their professional capabilities. The dashboards are embedded in an early assessment in a first year University commerce course and provide visual layouts that guide students to manage the research and analysis.
This presentation will showcase a micro-credentialing strategy and design principles developed to recognise capabilities, incentivise meaningful achievement and encourage students to reflect on their employability.
A new challenge is on the horizon for the education sector. The AQF is currently under review and the sector is rapidly trying to adapt to the changing needs of industry. Digital/Micro-credentialing and badges may be the answer. In this webinar session we will take a look at what is currently happening around the sector, discuss what the future workforce will look like and the types of learners that education providers will need to produce, what this all means to our current curricula and how ePortfolios could be a perfect tool to help facilitate the credentialing and badging process.
a proposal for a way to acknowledge and validate informal -, non formal - and formal learning through open badges, edubadges or microcredentials, in order to foster student mobility and worker mobility
Presentation by Ferenc Tátrai PhD – EDEN European Distance and e-Learning Network, at the MicroHE Expert Panel Workshop, 10 June 2020
More info: https://www.eden-online.org/microhe-expert-panel-workshop/
Give them what they want: Participatory approaches to developing anonymous as...Simon Davis
Presented at ALT-C 2015; https://altc.alt.ac.uk/2015/sessions/give-them-what-they-want-developing-a-flexible-anonymous-assignment-workflow-to-meet-diverse-needs-895/
Designing and assessing your work based learning systemNAFCareerAcads
Who should be involved in the design and assessment of a complete work-based learning system? Join a discussion of how to develop a team to include students, advisory board members, career and academic core teachers and counselors.
Ryerson's Career Checkpoint: Embedding Student Development into On-Campus Job...Ryerson Student Affairs
Ryerson's Career Checkpoint: Embedding Student Development into On-Campus Jobs
by Paulina Nozka & Kaitlyn Taylor-Asquini
As part of its commitment to preparing students for life after graduation, Ryerson University is embedding learning outcomes and implementing a professional development program into its 1,000+ on-campus student jobs. Informed by leading theories in student and career development, Career Checkpoint is composed of five key components, including supervisor toolkits and a student employee development program. The pilot year includes test and control groups involving multiple University departments, to demonstrate the benefit of embedding co-curricular learning in the workplace.
Using ePortfolios in teacher PD to build capacity Jo Elliot and Chie AdachiePortfolios Australia
With the increasing focus on graduate employability within higher education, ePortfolio activities present an opportunity to work with students on reflective practice and digital fluency for lifelong learning. However, universities must invest in building teachers’ capacity to confidently embed portfolio activities through the use of technologies. In this presentation, we will describe how we designed trials of two new ePortfolio platforms to build staff capacity, by incorporating these trials into courses for teaching staff and educational designers. We will also discuss the opportunities and challenges presented by such innovation projects through the lens of staff development.
a proposal for a way to acknowledge and validate informal -, non formal - and formal learning through open badges, edubadges or microcredentials, in order to foster student mobility and worker mobility
Presentation by Ferenc Tátrai PhD – EDEN European Distance and e-Learning Network, at the MicroHE Expert Panel Workshop, 10 June 2020
More info: https://www.eden-online.org/microhe-expert-panel-workshop/
Give them what they want: Participatory approaches to developing anonymous as...Simon Davis
Presented at ALT-C 2015; https://altc.alt.ac.uk/2015/sessions/give-them-what-they-want-developing-a-flexible-anonymous-assignment-workflow-to-meet-diverse-needs-895/
Designing and assessing your work based learning systemNAFCareerAcads
Who should be involved in the design and assessment of a complete work-based learning system? Join a discussion of how to develop a team to include students, advisory board members, career and academic core teachers and counselors.
Ryerson's Career Checkpoint: Embedding Student Development into On-Campus Job...Ryerson Student Affairs
Ryerson's Career Checkpoint: Embedding Student Development into On-Campus Jobs
by Paulina Nozka & Kaitlyn Taylor-Asquini
As part of its commitment to preparing students for life after graduation, Ryerson University is embedding learning outcomes and implementing a professional development program into its 1,000+ on-campus student jobs. Informed by leading theories in student and career development, Career Checkpoint is composed of five key components, including supervisor toolkits and a student employee development program. The pilot year includes test and control groups involving multiple University departments, to demonstrate the benefit of embedding co-curricular learning in the workplace.
Using ePortfolios in teacher PD to build capacity Jo Elliot and Chie AdachiePortfolios Australia
With the increasing focus on graduate employability within higher education, ePortfolio activities present an opportunity to work with students on reflective practice and digital fluency for lifelong learning. However, universities must invest in building teachers’ capacity to confidently embed portfolio activities through the use of technologies. In this presentation, we will describe how we designed trials of two new ePortfolio platforms to build staff capacity, by incorporating these trials into courses for teaching staff and educational designers. We will also discuss the opportunities and challenges presented by such innovation projects through the lens of staff development.
Using ePortfolios to strengthen assessment design: A response to contract che...ePortfolios Australia
The use of ghost writing from sophisticated contract cheating websites is a serious challenge for educational institutions. Current anti-plagiarism solutions rarely catch contract cheaters because their purchased assessment tasks are individualised rather than from matching existing sources. Slade et al. (2016) suggests strengthening the verification of a student’s identity in the design of high stakes assessment tasks. EPortfolios can be a useful tool in combating contract cheating because of individualised responses, the professional practice context, completion over time, and opportunity for progress review and feedback. In this workshop, we will work in groups of 4-5 to identify potential problem areas and then redesign generic high stakes assessment tasks (other than exams) through the use of ePortfolios. At critical points each table will present to the whole group for feedback. The facilitator has run similar assessment workshops representing 16 universities and looks forward to the workshop discussion and assessment re/designs that embed ePortfolio use.
Building connections through integrated ePortfolio curricula Jessica Tsai, C...ePortfolios Australia
Due to the expectations of industry to employ accomplished graduates in competitive environments, students need discipline knowledge connected with what they learn at through professional development opportunities and experience. EPortfolios provide a way to facilitate this learning/experience connection for students so they can develop their unique identity or ‘personal brand’. The use of ePortfolios, however, can tend to be used in a siloed way, commonly for reflective practice, which in itself is a noble activity. Others use it for accreditation requirements, or for showcasing for employment. We present a heuristic framework that identifies four key models of ePortfolio use: Developmental; Collaborative; Reflective; and Showcase that can be scaffolded (exposure, immersion, competency to mastery) across the curriculum in a program of study, dependant on discipline needs. We envisaged that students should experience an integration of all models to establish personal branding and to able to build professional connections.
Bb on Tour 2016 | Keynote - Brisbane | Learning 2020Blackboard APAC
Professor Suzi Vaughan, Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Learning and Teaching), Queensland University of Technology presented recently at the Bb Education on Tour event at QUT in Brisbane, on Thursday 3rd March 2016.
Developing students’ employability skills through social mediaSue Beckingham
This session will demonstrate the importance of embedding the use of social media and technology within the curriculum to develop a range of graduate attributes and employability skills. Examples will be shared of how students can develop:
authentic learning experiences to develop confident digital communication and collaboration skills
ways to engage with employers through social media through professional social networking
students' digital capabilities (Jisc 2015) awareness of the importance of lifelong learning and becoming a digital lifewide learner (Beckingham 2015) employability skills which include social skills such as communication and teamwork which increasingly in the workplace is also taking place online.
It is important that the constant evolution of social media is understood (Beckingham, Purvis and Rodger 2015), and that students are given authentic learning experiences to allow them to learn how to use the affordances of these digital spaces in a professional context. Active listening and curation; online collaboration and communication; creativity and the ability to create digital resources using multimedia; and digital connectedness, are all skills that can be developed further through participation of digital activities set in the context of the students discipline. The ubiquitous use of mobile technology opens numerous opportunities for students to use their own devices for learning Nerantzi and Beckingham (2015).
Why is this important?
The annual survey produced by the CBI (Confederation of British Industry) considers employers' requirements for graduate skills and highlight the dissatisfaction that employers feel over graduates' preparedness for the workplace. Over half of businesses (55%) were not confident there will be enough people available in the future with the necessary skills to fill their high-skilled jobs (CBI 2015:6) and noted that "Businesses look first and foremost for graduates with the right attitudes and aptitudes to enable them to be effective in the workplace – nearly nine in ten employers (89%) value these above factors such as degree subject (62%)." (CBI 2015:56).
Key areas of concern in this report were communication and team working skills. In today's digital age these skills need to be demonstrated confidently both face to face and online. Increasingly the first contact an employer makes with a prospective candidate is online. Particular attention should therefore also be given to the development of a professional online presence.
Participants will also have the opportunity to share and discuss their own use of social media and technology to develop employability skills.
WBL IN ACTION Event Slides Feb. 17, 2015innovatetk
Educators, work-based learning partners, superintendents, and those involved in Linked Learning get together to adopt and celebrate common definitions and effective practices along the College & Career Continuum for Tulare and King Counties. www.innovatetk.com/wbl-in-action
Digital currencies for employability and lifelong learningNicola Pallitt
Summary:
This presentation provides an overview of trends related to micro-credentials such as open badges in business education and the impact of these trends for a range of audiences. How are micro-credentials relevant to professional communication practitioners, educators and trainers? How might these be useful for students and employees?
Abstract:
Education and training sectors are undergoing radical changes. Future employees need to be more flexible than ever before. Micro-credentials such as open badges and statements of achievement recognise that learning today happens everywhere and can be regarded as digital currencies for employability and lifelong learning.
Students and employees share open badges and other forms of micro-credentials on their LinkedIn profiles and other professional online spaces to showcase their skills, attributes, competencies and ongoing professional learning and development. Besides traditional qualifications, students and employees are now able to display information about all learning opportunities such as MOOCs (Massive Open Online Courses), signalled by statements of participation and open badges verifying and recognising various competencies and achievements. This enables job seekers, for example, to make their personal learning pathways visible to others in ways that academic transcripts, diplomas or certificates are unable to do. How they showcase such skills to potential employers, build their online presence and make continued learning pathways visible online are becoming a new currency for communicating employability and continued professional learning. Such digital currencies offer a more fluid and flexible way to communicate with potential and current employers than the static CVs of yore.
Current opportunities for online learning accompanied by new business models challenge the orthodoxy of business education. This has also sparked a paradigm shift for how business educators and trainers credit learning and the kinds of learning experiences valued by students, educators, trainers and employers in the business sector.
This presentation provides an overview of trends related to micro-credentials in business education and the impact of these trends for a range of audiences. How are micro-credentials relevant to professional communication practitioners, educators and trainers? How might these be useful for students and employees?
Similar to Beyond the Resume – Using eportfolios for demonstrating skills and gaining employment in learning design in Australian higher education (20)
Reimagining student learning journey with ePortfolios Panos Vlachopoulos Arda...ePortfolios Australia
https://mqoutlook-my.sharepoint.com/personal/arda_tezcan_mq_edu_au/_layouts/15/onedrive.aspx?id=%2Fpersonal%2Farda%5Ftezcan%5Fmq%5Fedu%5Fau%2FDocuments%2FePortfolio%2FePortfolios%20Australia%2020x20&originalPath=aHR0cHM6Ly9tcW91dGxvb2stbXkuc2hhcmVwb2ludC5jb20vOmY6L2cvcGVyc29uYWwvYXJkYV90ZXpjYW5fbXFfZWR1X2F1L0VwMF9KYWRjc3NKR3FmV0dxYlRPV0NzQkVKNGlucnFPZEpibkMxY1p2WVFXMmc%5FcnRpbWU9aFd6eDlXdVQyVWc
Eportfolio is an integral part of the implementation of Macquarie University’s award-winning Bachelor of Arts (BA) Transferable Skills Framework (TSF). BA students can directly correlate their academic work to real job requirements - connecting their learning (both inside and outside of the classroom) with career opportunities. The TSF is designed to make explicit connections between coursework and employability skills, assisting students in recognising the capabilities they gain during their educational journey. The ePortfolio tool is intertwined with the coursework, where students can curate a digital showcase of their curricular and other achievements, projects, and competencies. This presentation will narrate the story of integrating an ePortolio and associated pedagogy across the BA. The focus will be on the activities undertaken to ensure a programmatic implementation of an ePortfolio and the lessons learned from the first year of implementation.
The journey of implementing the right digital platform for a student-centred,...ePortfolios Australia
"Macquarie University worked with students, academics, and major industry partners including the NSW Government, Accenture, Hays, EY, Deloitte, Adobe, and CBA in reimagining the Bachelor of Arts degree which won the Employability Award at the Australian Financial Review (AFR) Higher Education Awards 2020. The outcome of this voyage resulted in the creation of an innovative, transformative, and capability-driven Transferable Skills Framework that is embodied in the curriculum by integrating lifelong learning aspects with a strong emphasis on pedagogy, employability, and digital fluency.
To deliver these aspects, the University conducted a comprehensive technology landscape assessment which followed an enterprise-level implementation of a digital ePortfolio platform. A digital ecosystem was established by amalgamating ePortfolio technology with education design and employability. In this panel session, the discussion will be centred around the critical aspects of implementing a befitting digital ePortfolio system and ways to leverage it in support of enhancing lifelong learning."
In my presentation I am going to talk about the importance of having an Eportfolio for IT students and IT graduates. The focus is mainly on using GitHub as a platform for IT students to build their portfolio efficiently to present what they are good at to potential employers. In this presentation I will talk about how recruiters target specific candidates on GitHub. Also, there will be a comparison between Graduates GitHub’s portfolios and those who are stablished in their careers. Also, will provide some examples of how students or recent graduates can showcase their understanding of particular topics, or their interest in a particular field to make it as easy as possible for their prospective employers to understand their areas of expertise.
A reflective look back at the first 9 Eportfolio Forums - Key themes and topi...ePortfolios Australia
This will be the 10th Eportfolio Forum. This key milestone provides an opportunity to review what the key themes and topics have been over the previous nine Forums to determine what activities have dominated eportfolio practice, and how that might influence the future of eportfolio practice.
Digital Ethics Principles in ePortfolios: Version 2: Resource development by ...ePortfolios Australia
The Digital Ethics ePortfolio Task Force for the Association for Authentic, Experiential, & Evidence-Based Learning (AAEEBL) continued to bring together international ePortfolio scholars and practitioners to establish research-based digital practices for ePortfolio stakeholders, including institutions, students, educators, and administrators. Phase one developed an online interactive resource, Digital Ethics Principles in ePortfolios: Version 1, which outlines strategies, scenarios, and resources around ten principles. This second iteration adds additional principles related to ePortfolio evaluation practices; practices that encourage diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging; and visibility of labour. In Digital Ethics Principles in ePortfolios: Version 2, revisions to the original ten principles integrate information regarding eProfessionalism and legal issues that can intersect with ePortfolio practice. The original online visual interface has also been upgraded. This expanded version of the principles document continues to articulate explicit and applicable practices relevant to ePortfolio creators, educators, platform creators, and administrators of programs and institutions with ePortfolio requirements.
An exploration of third year BA Culinary and Gastronomic Science student expe...ePortfolios Australia
The benefits of reflective practice and eportfolio based learning are widely acknowledged in the literature, however, little work has evaluated its impact vis-à-vis a Culinary Arts curriculum. Therefore, the aim of this study was to explore third year BA Culinary and Gastronomic Science student experiences of developing a reflective practice eportfolio at Galway-Mayo Institute of Technology. A mixed method approach, using convenience sampling was implemented. Semi-structured interviews were held with experts in the field of eportfolio based learning and reflective practice in Ireland. Participants were voluntarily surveyed, to gather information on their experiences of developing a reflective practice eportfolio. The results highlighted tangible opportunities and barriers for undertaking a reflective practice eportfolio for the participants. Eportfolio based learning is rooted in a complex pedagogy, and its potential can only be realised if the processes underlying reflective practice are properly understood by all stakeholders. It’s imperative that the purpose of the reflective practice eportfolio is clearly defined, requirements are communicated, digital capabilities are measured. and training is delivered, rubrics are created, exemplars are shared, and support is provided, in order for it to be successfully adopted. Positive results depends on successful implementation.
Digital ethics and portfolios: What's next? Kristina Hoeppner Megan Haskins ePortfolios Australia
Over the last two years, the AAEEBL Digital Ethics Task Force explored principles of digital ethics and how they relate to portfolio work and can be integrated into portfolios. In this conversation, the Task Force wants to explore with participants what practical implementations of the principles can look like, discuss possible research topics and collaborations, and where to go next with this topic. Establishing the principles was the first step in an effort to raise awareness about digital ethics in portfolios and support students, academics, researchers, staff, institutions, and also portfolio platform creators to come together, discuss often difficult topics around digital ethics, and how to improve on our current practices.
Eportfolios through the lenses of diversity, equity, inclusion, belonging, an...ePortfolios Australia
In 2020/21, the AAEEBL Digital Ethics Task Force investigated three new principles: Visibility of Labour, Evaluation, and Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, Belonging, and Decolonisation (DEIBD). In this short presentation, we will introduce Forum participants to the DEIBD principle and strategies that can be employed when working with portfolios to improve the experience of students. The strategies provide practical suggestions around the five concepts held within DEIBD and relate them to portfolio work.
Assessment and Feedback Using ePortfolios: Shifting to a New Paradigm of Prac...ePortfolios Australia
ePortfolio practice focuses on reflective pedagogies and iterative submissions of student assessment responses. Students are encouraged to store learnings in their ePortfolio to showcase their strengths to different audiences. Innovations in practice come and go depending on buy-in and resource allocation. Once again, the world is significantly changing and the ‘new’ future of post COVID-19 remains ambiguous. In this paper, we propose a paradigm shift that facilitates a dialogic process around the collection of feedback a student receives in their ePortfolio. The design of an assessment regime sets the stage for active student participation in curating their individual feedback from self, peers, educators or industry. The aim of this process is for students to get a personalised reconstruction of their learning progress, through collaborative and social learning opportunities. In this paper we will offer further explanation of how this paradigm impacts practice in today’s digital era.
An overview of the work and activities of Eportfolio Ireland (a professional learning community for eportfolio practitioners) over the COVID-19 crisis. We will highlight activities with institutions and organisations, the focus of our webinars, and key features from the The Irish Journal of Technology Enhanced Learning special issue, edited by Eportfolio Ireland.
An emerging approach to Prior Learning Assessment and RecognitionePortfolios Australia
Serge Ravet shares the work being done for the renewal of the French version of Prior Learning Assessment and Recognition (Validation des Acquis de l’Expérience – VAE) and about ePIC 2021, the 19th International Conference on Open Education and Open Recognition technologies and practices
SLICCs – A flexible framework to deliver reflective experiential learning and...ePortfolios Australia
Student-Led, Individually-Created Courses (SLICCs) are a scalable and flexible experiential learning and assessment framework using an e-portfolio, awarding academic credit for experiential learning. The framework is based on five learning outcomes that students contextualise for themselves, with support from within the framework and feedback from faculty. These learning outcomes are stratified across the academic levels, through pre-honours, honours, masters, to professional doctorate. The framework provides the flexibility for faculty to offer boundaries to the learning experience, or for students to entirely define their own experience, bringing the extra-curricular into the formal curriculum. SLICCs are supported by a small team, and a comprehensive array of resources for students, tutors, faculty and administrators (more information available at http://www.ed.ac.uk/sliccs). SLICCs are now becoming well-established across the University of Edinburgh, with more than 20 courses using the framework, and there is increasing interest from other institutions in viewing and adopting the approach.
The 2021 Eportfolio Shark Tank allowed people within the eportfolio community to input from expert Eportfolio Sharks about an idea or an issue - for more information go to: https://eportfoliosaustralia.wordpress.com/other-events/eportfolio-shark-tank/
Creating, designing and developing our eportfolio Co-Lab Kathryn Coleman & Ka...ePortfolios Australia
Co-Labs enable collaborative and experimental research opportunities based on themes and needs. This session will lead a conversation around how an Australasian eportfolio Co-Lab will function. Discussions will also cente around exploring the merits of key themes and priorities for 2021, and how to generate interest in this group.
The presentation will outline the successes and challenges of introducing an electronic portfolio to first year students using MKM software. At the School of Medicine at Western Sydney University a portfolio was introduced to first year students in 2019 to promote self-regulated learning and skills in reflection. Student portfolios are reviewed and discussed with academic advisors. Curriculum design and teaching students, advisors and staff are critical to the successful implementation of a portfolio.
Building a Pandemic ePortfolio using the Karuta Open Source Portfolio 3.0 Jac...ePortfolios Australia
"The coronavirus pandemic has dramatically changed the landscape of higher education. Over a short period of time, courses have moved online with students being required to adapt to new ways of learning.
Although many tools have been used to enhance the student learning experience, many researchers have long advocated a more holistic, personal, and integrative approach. As eloquently presented by Jenson and Treuer (2014), learning should be put in a much broader context where courses, co-curricular activities, internships, work, and personal experiences, contribute to what are called 20th century lifelong learning skills (collecting, self-regulating, reflecting, integrating, and collaborating).
The Pandemic ePortfolio is an illustration of this more integrative approach using Karuta 3.0, a simple and flexible open source ePortfolio tool supported by the Apereo Foundation. See how a simple yet powerful workflow has been designed to help students make sense of this difficult period.
Jill. D. Jenson and Paul Treuer (2014), Defining the e-Portfolio: What It is and Why it Matters, Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 46:2, 50-57, https://doi.org/10.1080/00091383.2014.897192."
Supporting students to develop their teacher identity through scaffolded port...ePortfolios Australia
"A pre-service teacher education course has a dual purpose. It provides future teachers with the knowledge they require to teach, but it also must also serve to transform the student and enable them to become the teacher. This change of identity is not a sudden transition that happens when a student graduates, rather it needs to be embedded from the start of the course and then progressively developed throughout the learning journey.
This presentation describes how PebblePad workbooks are used in a curriculum content unit to scaffold students to write, speak and think as teachers. The workbooks contain assessment tasks with sequenced response pages containing guiding questions, hints and modelled construction. The tasks progress from simple to complex across the unit and include many opportunities for the student to practice the skills needed to develop their identity as a teacher. "
Moving from a paper-based nursing clinical placement tool to an online portfolio platform was not without its challenges. In the School of Nursing and Midwifery at Edith Cowan University a whole of school approach was adopted that incorporated not only the 3000 plus student body but academics, professional staff, and clinical placement administrators. This resulted in rewards that were seen and felt way beyond the technology used to support it. The adage 'It Takes a Village' was never truer in overcoming the challenges faced, however, ultimately determined the success of this story and ability to showcase the student learning journey.
New Spaces of Belonging: ePortfolios, Community and Digital Placemaking Brian...ePortfolios Australia
The shift to a physically distanced yet digitally connected campuses in response to COVID-19 has rendered visible the criticality of student-led technologies to engender a sense of community and belonging among students. This paper addresses the social and pedagogical value of ePortfolios in building a sense of belonging within in Higher Education by investigating synergies between well-established ePortfolio pedagogies and the cross-disciplinary fields of digital placemaking and innovative learning environment design. It addresses the need to create critical digital pedagogical models that are agnostic to the physical constraints of campus spaces and identify the utility of space as a heuristic for improved learning outcomes and increasing learner agency and belonging among scholarly communities of peers. Finally, the paper offers insights into spatiality for learning and belonging that achieve a balance of constructively aligned digital spaces while affording opportunities for student agency, ownership and belonging to community in the digital realm.
Lifelong Learning ePortfolios: a media-rich technology for capturing and evid...ePortfolios Australia
OB3 – Beautiful Study for Lifelong Learning is a personal learning environment for creating and sharing content as part of informal, non-formal, and formal learning. Within minutes, individuals with basic technological skills (i.e. users of MS Office, internet browsers, and email applications) can author and share media-rich documents including hyperlinks, embedded discussions, videos, and/or audio-recordings. In the last two years, OB3 has been used to build ePortfolios for reflective practice in an MBA programme, and professional certification in a Midwifery programme. During the workshop, attendees will learn how to build an OB3 reflective practice portfolio. They will learn how to 1) capture their thoughts in writing, audio recordings, video, photos, hyperlinks, etc. to reflect on development areas; 2) keep private and personal records of their reflections as they happen; 3) email content and any attachments from their mobile devices directly to their portfolio; and 4) share selected sections of their reflections with other people as part of a course or co-creation for understanding project.
Palestine last event orientationfvgnh .pptxRaedMohamed3
An EFL lesson about the current events in Palestine. It is intended to be for intermediate students who wish to increase their listening skills through a short lesson in power point.
How to Split Bills in the Odoo 17 POS ModuleCeline George
Bills have a main role in point of sale procedure. It will help to track sales, handling payments and giving receipts to customers. Bill splitting also has an important role in POS. For example, If some friends come together for dinner and if they want to divide the bill then it is possible by POS bill splitting. This slide will show how to split bills in odoo 17 POS.
Ethnobotany and Ethnopharmacology:
Ethnobotany in herbal drug evaluation,
Impact of Ethnobotany in traditional medicine,
New development in herbals,
Bio-prospecting tools for drug discovery,
Role of Ethnopharmacology in drug evaluation,
Reverse Pharmacology.
The Art Pastor's Guide to Sabbath | Steve ThomasonSteve Thomason
What is the purpose of the Sabbath Law in the Torah. It is interesting to compare how the context of the law shifts from Exodus to Deuteronomy. Who gets to rest, and why?
Read| The latest issue of The Challenger is here! We are thrilled to announce that our school paper has qualified for the NATIONAL SCHOOLS PRESS CONFERENCE (NSPC) 2024. Thank you for your unwavering support and trust. Dive into the stories that made us stand out!
Unit 8 - Information and Communication Technology (Paper I).pdfThiyagu K
This slides describes the basic concepts of ICT, basics of Email, Emerging Technology and Digital Initiatives in Education. This presentations aligns with the UGC Paper I syllabus.
The Roman Empire A Historical Colossus.pdfkaushalkr1407
The Roman Empire, a vast and enduring power, stands as one of history's most remarkable civilizations, leaving an indelible imprint on the world. It emerged from the Roman Republic, transitioning into an imperial powerhouse under the leadership of Augustus Caesar in 27 BCE. This transformation marked the beginning of an era defined by unprecedented territorial expansion, architectural marvels, and profound cultural influence.
The empire's roots lie in the city of Rome, founded, according to legend, by Romulus in 753 BCE. Over centuries, Rome evolved from a small settlement to a formidable republic, characterized by a complex political system with elected officials and checks on power. However, internal strife, class conflicts, and military ambitions paved the way for the end of the Republic. Julius Caesar’s dictatorship and subsequent assassination in 44 BCE created a power vacuum, leading to a civil war. Octavian, later Augustus, emerged victorious, heralding the Roman Empire’s birth.
Under Augustus, the empire experienced the Pax Romana, a 200-year period of relative peace and stability. Augustus reformed the military, established efficient administrative systems, and initiated grand construction projects. The empire's borders expanded, encompassing territories from Britain to Egypt and from Spain to the Euphrates. Roman legions, renowned for their discipline and engineering prowess, secured and maintained these vast territories, building roads, fortifications, and cities that facilitated control and integration.
The Roman Empire’s society was hierarchical, with a rigid class system. At the top were the patricians, wealthy elites who held significant political power. Below them were the plebeians, free citizens with limited political influence, and the vast numbers of slaves who formed the backbone of the economy. The family unit was central, governed by the paterfamilias, the male head who held absolute authority.
Culturally, the Romans were eclectic, absorbing and adapting elements from the civilizations they encountered, particularly the Greeks. Roman art, literature, and philosophy reflected this synthesis, creating a rich cultural tapestry. Latin, the Roman language, became the lingua franca of the Western world, influencing numerous modern languages.
Roman architecture and engineering achievements were monumental. They perfected the arch, vault, and dome, constructing enduring structures like the Colosseum, Pantheon, and aqueducts. These engineering marvels not only showcased Roman ingenuity but also served practical purposes, from public entertainment to water supply.
How to Create Map Views in the Odoo 17 ERPCeline George
The map views are useful for providing a geographical representation of data. They allow users to visualize and analyze the data in a more intuitive manner.
We all have good and bad thoughts from time to time and situation to situation. We are bombarded daily with spiraling thoughts(both negative and positive) creating all-consuming feel , making us difficult to manage with associated suffering. Good thoughts are like our Mob Signal (Positive thought) amidst noise(negative thought) in the atmosphere. Negative thoughts like noise outweigh positive thoughts. These thoughts often create unwanted confusion, trouble, stress and frustration in our mind as well as chaos in our physical world. Negative thoughts are also known as “distorted thinking”.
How to Make a Field invisible in Odoo 17Celine George
It is possible to hide or invisible some fields in odoo. Commonly using “invisible” attribute in the field definition to invisible the fields. This slide will show how to make a field invisible in odoo 17.
Operation “Blue Star” is the only event in the history of Independent India where the state went into war with its own people. Even after about 40 years it is not clear if it was culmination of states anger over people of the region, a political game of power or start of dictatorial chapter in the democratic setup.
The people of Punjab felt alienated from main stream due to denial of their just demands during a long democratic struggle since independence. As it happen all over the word, it led to militant struggle with great loss of lives of military, police and civilian personnel. Killing of Indira Gandhi and massacre of innocent Sikhs in Delhi and other India cities was also associated with this movement.
2. RMIT Classification: Trusted
OUTLINE
KEY DISCUSSION POINTS
o Narrative Perspectives: jobseeker,employee and
employer
o Expressing the authentic self
o Features/Benefits
o Key takeaways
2 August 2020
3. RMIT Classification: Trusted
NARRATIVE PERSPECTIVES
How do I communicate my
authentic professional self to
recruiter and employer?
How do I expressthe value I bring
as a Learning Designer?
How do I impart my ‘Cultural fit’?
Tom
JOBSEEKER
Demonstrating (range/depthof)
skills
Reflecting on experience
Collating,sorting and presenting
my experience – LD 'taxonomy'
Gap filling
Building a career trajectory
Kate
EMPLOYEE
katemitchell.me
Using portfolio as an additionto
the resume – 'finding the authentic
self'.
Connectionsto practice.
Moving beyond standard
recruitment.
Understanding depth of
demonstratedexperience.
Suneeti
EMPLOYER
3 August 2020
4. RMIT Classification: Trusted
EXPRESSING THE AUTHENTIC SELF
STRUCTURING A PORTFOLIO
4 August 2020
Learning
Knowledge
Experience
Community
Reflection
Opinion
ResearchGate
Description
Evidence
Reflection
Qualifications
Credentials
Connections
Opinion
Professional Community
SIG
Research
Reference
Connected, Curated, Continuous & Open
5. RMIT Classification: Trusted
VALUE &VALUES IN PRACTICE
Demonstrating skills, work and value
- professional & transferable
- explicit & intangible, 'cultural fit'
Learning through doing
- showing rather than telling
Establishing credibility/expertise
- informal benchmarks
- beyond accreditation
Reflecting on practice
- ongoing and lifelong learning
- considerations to storage and workload
5 August 2020
6. RMIT Classification: Trusted
KSC EXAMPLES
ADDITIONAL DEMONSTRATION OF KEY SELECTION CRITERIA
Communication Skills
“Demonstrated outstanding
communication and interpersonal skills,
with the ability to work as part of a diverse
team, and liaise and negotiate with a
range of people to achieve agreed
outcomes and reconcile different views.”
“Excellent oral, written, interpersonal and
digital communication skills.”
Multimedia development
“Demonstrated experience in designing
and delivering interactive learning
experiences for students.”
“Demonstrated ability to design and
develop learning activities that engage
students, and promote and assess learning
with a particular focus on the use of
interactive and digital technologies.”
Pedagogy/L&T background
“Demonstrated experience in developing
guidelines and self-help resources to
encourage development of pedagogical
expertise within an emerging delivery
models.”
“Experience in working within an
education sector, including working with
teaching and/or academic staff.”
6 August 2020
7. RMIT Classification: Trusted
KEYTAKEAWAYS
“SEEK PORTFOLIO MOMENTS”
• Beyond the resume
• Portfolio is just one piece of the professional identity
• Evidence of the professional authentic self
• Connected,Curated, Continuous& Open
7 August 2020