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.
Building Leadership Capabilities in a Postgraduate Degree: Unpacking the Lear...ePortfolios Australia
This presentation aims to share how the learning process of curation, reflection and evidencing of learning outcomes were used as an approach to showcase the learning product of an assessment task through storytelling in a postgraduate Leadership unit at the Deakin Business School. In addition, we will share particular insights to the ‘iterative’ and ‘agile’ approach taken to continuous improvement of the assessment task over three trimester offerings of the unit, based on the lived experiences of a multi-disciplinary unit team. Further, discussion on the learning design and educational technology platform selected and how it was integrated, scaffolded and supported in the design, development and delivery of the unit will be presented.
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.
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.
'Digital bloom' is an abstract collection of digital stories which capture/reveal individual meanings of digital literacy. Users can see other people's stories and they can also add to them. During the demonstration, the participants could explore the installation, learn more about the project and would be able to add their own stories and understandings of digital literacy and create their own 'meadow'.
Jisc conference 2012
The Motivate-ing project continued recording data from the JISC SWaNI Motivate Project to include full academic year findings, and created a guide to the use of SMS and other messaging services in teaching & learning.This workshops aims to share and evaluate the findings, resources and guides developed.
Jisc conference 2012
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.
Building Leadership Capabilities in a Postgraduate Degree: Unpacking the Lear...ePortfolios Australia
This presentation aims to share how the learning process of curation, reflection and evidencing of learning outcomes were used as an approach to showcase the learning product of an assessment task through storytelling in a postgraduate Leadership unit at the Deakin Business School. In addition, we will share particular insights to the ‘iterative’ and ‘agile’ approach taken to continuous improvement of the assessment task over three trimester offerings of the unit, based on the lived experiences of a multi-disciplinary unit team. Further, discussion on the learning design and educational technology platform selected and how it was integrated, scaffolded and supported in the design, development and delivery of the unit will be presented.
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.
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.
'Digital bloom' is an abstract collection of digital stories which capture/reveal individual meanings of digital literacy. Users can see other people's stories and they can also add to them. During the demonstration, the participants could explore the installation, learn more about the project and would be able to add their own stories and understandings of digital literacy and create their own 'meadow'.
Jisc conference 2012
The Motivate-ing project continued recording data from the JISC SWaNI Motivate Project to include full academic year findings, and created a guide to the use of SMS and other messaging services in teaching & learning.This workshops aims to share and evaluate the findings, resources and guides developed.
Jisc conference 2012
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.
Enhancing teaching and learning through FE. BIS have funded JISC Advance to manage 32 projects throughout 2012-13 focussing on four key areas:Innovative uses of technology, Improving the learner experience, Improving efficiencies and Making better use of existing resources.This session looks at the progress two of the projects have made, and how to get involved in using the outputs.
Jisc conference 2012
Introducing students to Digital Capabilities OnlineJisc
Member story from the University of Surrey.
Joint building digital capability and digital experience insights community of practice event, 21 May 2020.
A ceLTIc project webinar. The ceLTIc project shows how to enable LTI (Learning Tools Interoperability) connectors to build a flexible infrastructure.This session will discuss how the JISC-funded ceLTIc:sharing project is evaluating the use of LTI to provide a shared service for institutions interested in evaluating WebPA. It will include a demonstration of linking to the tool from Blackboard Learn 9 and Moodle, as well as how the outcomes service along with the unofficial memberships and setting extensions are being used to enhance this integration in a VLE-independent way.
Jisc conference 2012
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."
Keynote: organisational approaches to support staff and students by providing...Jisc
Professor Ale Armellini, dean of learning and teaching and director of the Institute of Learning and Teaching in Higher Education, University of Northampton
Rob Howe, head of learning technology, University of Northampton
Joint building digital capability and digital experience insights community of practice event, 21 May 2020.
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.
Redesigning assessment and feedback - landscape review and areas for developmentJisc
An opportunity to discuss findings to date from our research into the assessment and feedback landscape and to input your thoughts on the future direction of this work.
A presentation by Lisa Gray, senior consultant (HE learning and teaching), Jisc and Gill Ferrell, consultant and IMS Europe program director, IMS global learning consortium.
Creating Abertay University's own "Sticky Campus"
Speakers:
Alastair Robertson, director of teaching and learning enhancement, University of Abertay Dundee
Liam Hutchinson, learning enhancement coordinator, University of Abertay Dundee
This session will provide the audience with an overview of Abertay's efforts to create a new "sticky campus" through new learning spaces and embracing digital technologies that enhance students' learning and engagement. There will be particular reference to the staff development aspects of this strategic initiative.
Conversational platforms as an alternative to the LMS - the results of the Aula pilot at Ravensbourne
Speakers:
Rosemary Stott, associate dean, learning innovation, Ravensbourne
Anders Krohn, co-founder and CEO, Aula
Building on Jisc and Educause’s work on ‘next generation digital learning environments’, this presentation explores the theory and its practical implications at institutional scale. The rationale for and results of the Ravensbourne pilot of the conversational platform Aula, used as an alternative to the LMS and emails, are discussed.
Developing and rolling out a digital educators’ qualification to staff based ...Jisc
Speaker: Ciara Duffy, centre for excellence manager digital learning, South West College.
Improving staff and student digital skills has been at the core of South West College’s (SWC) digital strategy for the past two years. This session will take you through SWC’s building digital capacity journey and how it supported a seamless transition for staff and students to a fully online learning, teaching and assessment model beginning on the 23 March.
Joint building digital capability and digital experience insights community of practice event, 21 May 2020.
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.
Defining future learning - the City of Wolverhampton College wayJisc
A presentation from our joint building digital capability and digital experience insights community of practice event in May 2021.
Presented by Conrad Taylor, business learning and technologies manager and Adam Dwight, learning innovator, lecturer from City of Wolverhampton College.
Organisational transformation and curriculum change: turning things Jisc
Organisational transformation and curriculum change: Turning things around presented by Professor Mark Stubbs (Manchester Metropolitan University) and facilitated by Pam Parker (City University).
Jisc conference 2012
Presentation of Inge de Waard for EDEN's NAP webinar on 'Student Evaluation during & after COVID19' - 22 April 2020, 15:30 CEST
More info:
https://www.eden-online.org/student-evaluation-during-and-after-covid-19/
Presentation of Simon Paul Atkinson for EDEN's Education in time of pandemic webinar series on 'How to engage and support students online' - 27 April 2020, 17:00 CEST
More info:
https://www.eden-online.org/how-to-engage-and-support-students-online/
TLC2016 - Digicouching pedagogy in online learning on Humak University of App...BlackboardEMEA
Presenter: Paivi Timonen
Organisation: Humak - Humanistic University of Applied Sciences
Description: The Humak University of Applied Sciences runs online learning on Moodle/Moodlerooms and online webinars (Adobe Connect /Collaborate). Pedagogical aim is couching pedagogy which Humak has developed for the purpose to develop socio constructive learning. Studies are on digital environments. For supporting learning on small groups Humak uses real time webinars. For real time webinars we have developed a pedagogical path for activating and deepening students learning. Humak has recent experience on cMOOCs (Constructive Massive Online Courses).
Enhancing teaching and learning through FE. BIS have funded JISC Advance to manage 32 projects throughout 2012-13 focussing on four key areas:Innovative uses of technology, Improving the learner experience, Improving efficiencies and Making better use of existing resources.This session looks at the progress two of the projects have made, and how to get involved in using the outputs.
Jisc conference 2012
Introducing students to Digital Capabilities OnlineJisc
Member story from the University of Surrey.
Joint building digital capability and digital experience insights community of practice event, 21 May 2020.
A ceLTIc project webinar. The ceLTIc project shows how to enable LTI (Learning Tools Interoperability) connectors to build a flexible infrastructure.This session will discuss how the JISC-funded ceLTIc:sharing project is evaluating the use of LTI to provide a shared service for institutions interested in evaluating WebPA. It will include a demonstration of linking to the tool from Blackboard Learn 9 and Moodle, as well as how the outcomes service along with the unofficial memberships and setting extensions are being used to enhance this integration in a VLE-independent way.
Jisc conference 2012
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."
Keynote: organisational approaches to support staff and students by providing...Jisc
Professor Ale Armellini, dean of learning and teaching and director of the Institute of Learning and Teaching in Higher Education, University of Northampton
Rob Howe, head of learning technology, University of Northampton
Joint building digital capability and digital experience insights community of practice event, 21 May 2020.
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.
Redesigning assessment and feedback - landscape review and areas for developmentJisc
An opportunity to discuss findings to date from our research into the assessment and feedback landscape and to input your thoughts on the future direction of this work.
A presentation by Lisa Gray, senior consultant (HE learning and teaching), Jisc and Gill Ferrell, consultant and IMS Europe program director, IMS global learning consortium.
Creating Abertay University's own "Sticky Campus"
Speakers:
Alastair Robertson, director of teaching and learning enhancement, University of Abertay Dundee
Liam Hutchinson, learning enhancement coordinator, University of Abertay Dundee
This session will provide the audience with an overview of Abertay's efforts to create a new "sticky campus" through new learning spaces and embracing digital technologies that enhance students' learning and engagement. There will be particular reference to the staff development aspects of this strategic initiative.
Conversational platforms as an alternative to the LMS - the results of the Aula pilot at Ravensbourne
Speakers:
Rosemary Stott, associate dean, learning innovation, Ravensbourne
Anders Krohn, co-founder and CEO, Aula
Building on Jisc and Educause’s work on ‘next generation digital learning environments’, this presentation explores the theory and its practical implications at institutional scale. The rationale for and results of the Ravensbourne pilot of the conversational platform Aula, used as an alternative to the LMS and emails, are discussed.
Developing and rolling out a digital educators’ qualification to staff based ...Jisc
Speaker: Ciara Duffy, centre for excellence manager digital learning, South West College.
Improving staff and student digital skills has been at the core of South West College’s (SWC) digital strategy for the past two years. This session will take you through SWC’s building digital capacity journey and how it supported a seamless transition for staff and students to a fully online learning, teaching and assessment model beginning on the 23 March.
Joint building digital capability and digital experience insights community of practice event, 21 May 2020.
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.
Defining future learning - the City of Wolverhampton College wayJisc
A presentation from our joint building digital capability and digital experience insights community of practice event in May 2021.
Presented by Conrad Taylor, business learning and technologies manager and Adam Dwight, learning innovator, lecturer from City of Wolverhampton College.
Organisational transformation and curriculum change: turning things Jisc
Organisational transformation and curriculum change: Turning things around presented by Professor Mark Stubbs (Manchester Metropolitan University) and facilitated by Pam Parker (City University).
Jisc conference 2012
Presentation of Inge de Waard for EDEN's NAP webinar on 'Student Evaluation during & after COVID19' - 22 April 2020, 15:30 CEST
More info:
https://www.eden-online.org/student-evaluation-during-and-after-covid-19/
Presentation of Simon Paul Atkinson for EDEN's Education in time of pandemic webinar series on 'How to engage and support students online' - 27 April 2020, 17:00 CEST
More info:
https://www.eden-online.org/how-to-engage-and-support-students-online/
TLC2016 - Digicouching pedagogy in online learning on Humak University of App...BlackboardEMEA
Presenter: Paivi Timonen
Organisation: Humak - Humanistic University of Applied Sciences
Description: The Humak University of Applied Sciences runs online learning on Moodle/Moodlerooms and online webinars (Adobe Connect /Collaborate). Pedagogical aim is couching pedagogy which Humak has developed for the purpose to develop socio constructive learning. Studies are on digital environments. For supporting learning on small groups Humak uses real time webinars. For real time webinars we have developed a pedagogical path for activating and deepening students learning. Humak has recent experience on cMOOCs (Constructive Massive Online Courses).
The Blackboard Portfolio tool: Features, uses, and campus-wide implementation...Jason Rhode
The new Blackboard Portfolio tool released with Blackboard learn in April 2014 is much-improved and provides an easy-to-use platform for students to demonstrate and reflect upon what they have learned throughout their university career. Northern Illinois University (NIU) implemented the portfolios campus-wide during 2015, and it was used by thousands of students in a relatively short time. This presentation at BbWorld16 will provide an overview of the portfolio tool, strategies for developing portfolios that serve different purposes, and best practices for institutional adoption. Sample portfolios and exemplars from faculty who are using Blackboard portfolios in their classes will be shared, along with NIU’s campus-wide implementation process. Opportunities and challenges will be discussed to provide insights for others planning to roll-out portfolios at their institutions.
The Blackboard Portfolio tool: Features, uses, and campus-wide implementation...Stephanie Richter
Presented at BbWorld16 - The new Blackboard Portfolio released with Blackboard Learn in April 2014, is much-improved and provides an easy-to-use platform for students to demonstrate and reflect upon what they have learned throughout their university career. Northern Illinois University (NIU) implemented the portfolios campus-wide during 2015, and it was used by thousands of students in a relatively short time. This presentation will provide an overview of the portfolio tool, strategies for developing portfolios that serve different purposes, and best practices for institutional adoption. Sample portfolios and exemplars from faculty who are using Blackboard portfolios in their classes will be shared, along with NIU's campus-wide implementation process. Opportunities and challenges will be discussed to provide insights for others planning to roll-out portfolios at their institutions.
Improving 180 Blackboard Sites in 180 Days - Christian King & Sandra Thwaites...Blackboard APAC
At many universities, the Blackboard subject site is the primary interface for the student learning experience. If the site is poorly organised, students do not know how to navigate the learning experience, such as when to engage with what content. If assessment criteria are minimally indicated, the quality of submissions suffers. If no tools are used to foster interaction, the learning experience becomes isolating. Conversely, when Bb sites are effectively designed and maintained, the quality of the student learning experience tends to be high. The quality of Bb sites varies across universities and within programs of study. Students who experience a well-designed site in their first semesters come to expect this standard in subsequent semesters.
Bond University thereby undertook a whole-of-university strategic priority project to improve 180 Bb subject sites in 180 days. Associate Deans (Learning & Teaching) in each faculty selected the sites. The initial quality of the sites varied, with many assessed as initially high quality, meaning that improvement meant moving from strength to strength and focusing on elements such as increasing elements of technology enhanced learning. The co-facilitators of this presentation are the academic developers who worked one-on-one with each of the participating academics. Therefore, from their perspectives, the key takeaways for attending delegates will be:
- Identification of challenges and stumbling blocks, as well as success strategies
- Checklists and professional development materials
- Illustration of before and after improvements as exemplars
- Ideas for increasing elements of technology enhanced learning
- Templates for emails, announcements and other communications
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.
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
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.
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.
"This session will introduce the work of Eportfolio Ireland, a professional learning network for practitioners and researchers. In this session, we will engage in a structured discussion around issues of identity and ethics in the context of eportfolio practice. Together we will consider the following questions:
- Who owns student eportfolio data?
- What happens if a student documents activities which are in breach of law?
- Is it ethical to ask students to pay for continued eportfolio access after graduation?
- What is the relationship between identity formation and eportfolio development?
- How do students capture their identity formation journey through eportfolio?
- How does eportfolio create self-constructed multiple identities?"
Strategies to Improve your Digital Well-being Using ePortfolios Marie B FisherePortfolios Australia
Digital well being is an important aspect of our work and study that often takes ‘a back seat’ in our overloaded lives.
The aim of this paper is to reflect on what Digital Well being means to us and how ePortfolios can be used to achieve our life and work goals.
How do we define digital well being? Why is it important?
How can we refresh and use our ePortfolios to improve our job prospects, engagement or collaboration with others and work life balance?
What can we change in our approach when challenges overwhelm or stymie our Digital well being?
Beyond the Resume – Using eportfolios for demonstrating skills and gaining em...ePortfolios Australia
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
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.
The Indian economy is classified into different sectors to simplify the analysis and understanding of economic activities. For Class 10, it's essential to grasp the sectors of the Indian economy, understand their characteristics, and recognize their importance. This guide will provide detailed notes on the Sectors of the Indian Economy Class 10, using specific long-tail keywords to enhance comprehension.
For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
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!
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.
Students, digital devices and success - Andreas Schleicher - 27 May 2024..pptxEduSkills OECD
Andreas Schleicher presents at the OECD webinar ‘Digital devices in schools: detrimental distraction or secret to success?’ on 27 May 2024. The presentation was based on findings from PISA 2022 results and the webinar helped launch the PISA in Focus ‘Managing screen time: How to protect and equip students against distraction’ https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/education/managing-screen-time_7c225af4-en and the OECD Education Policy Perspective ‘Students, digital devices and success’ can be found here - https://oe.cd/il/5yV
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.
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”.
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.
Using ePortfolios in teacher PD to build capacity Jo Elliot and Chie Adachi
1. Using ePortfolios
with teaching staff
Building staff capacity while
informing evaluation of learning
technologies
Jo Elliott and Chie Adachi
@Dr_JoElliott @chieadachi
Deakin University CRICOS Provider Code: 00113B
2. Overview
Deakin University CRICOS Provider Code: 00113B
- The project: Evaluating portfolio platforms
- The pilots: Trialing the platforms with staff
- The lessons
3. DLE3 Portfolio project
Deakin University CRICOS Provider Code: 00113B
- Aim: Identify and evaluate an ePortfolio platform for University-
wide implementation
- Two platforms selected for evaluation
- 11 pilot units
4. The platforms
Deakin University CRICOS Provider Code: 00113B
PebblePad
• “learning journey” platform
• Emphasis on structured, scaffolded
learning, reflection and curation of
evidence
• LMS-scale system, offering a wide
range of options
• Applicable at both unit and course
levels
5. The platforms
Deakin University CRICOS Provider Code: 00113B
PebblePad
• “learning journey” platform
• Emphasis on structured, scaffolded
learning, reflection and curation of
evidence
• LMS-scale system, offering a wide
range of options
• Applicable at both unit and course
levels
Portfolium
• “student success” platform
• Emphasis on employment and
employability through personal
portfolio pages, talent matching and
networking
• Simple, social-media-type interface,
pre-defined structure
• Greater applicability at course-level
6. Why pilot in staff courses?
Deakin University CRICOS Provider Code: 00113B
1. Build capacity for portfolio pedagogy
2. Position teachers as learners
3. Provide opportunity to explore new learning technology
4. Provide opportunity for staff to provide feedback on platforms
5. Draw on staff experience when developing training resources
6. Induct staff into the University’s innovation culture
7. Pilot 1 – Grad Cert in Higher Ed (Learning & Teaching)
Deakin University CRICOS Provider Code: 00113B
HEA accreditation through the GCHE(LT)
EEE740
A1 Design and plan
learning activities
and/or programmes
A2 Teach and/or
support learning
EEE741
A3 Assess and give
feedback to learners
EEE742
A4 Develop effective
learning
environments and
approaches to
student support and
guidance
EEE743
A5 Engage in
continuing
professional
development,
incorporating
research, scholarship
and evaluation
8. Pilot 1 – cont’d
Deakin University CRICOS Provider Code: 00113B
• Learners (staff) to build portfolio across GCHE(LT)
– Written reflections on each Area of Activity (A1 – A5)
– Evidence of ongoing professional development
• Opportunity to add to and build upon portfolio following course
9. Pilot 1 – What happened?
Deakin University CRICOS Provider Code: 00113B
• We messed up the learning design…
• Majority of learners chose not to use the platform as we set it up
• Some learners used it, differently
– Interest in, and appreciation for, platform
10. Pilot 2 – Digital Learning, Design and Assessment
Deakin University CRICOS Provider Code: 00113B
Assessment
Task
Reflection 1:
On designing
for learners
and outcomes
Reflection 2:
On learning
activities and
assessment
Reflection 3:
On selected
theory
• Optional reflective prompts
throughout unit
• Linked to assessment task
• Few learners engage with prompts
• Provide opportunity to complete both
reflections and assessment task in
portfolio platform
• More direct link between
reflections and assessment
• Can continue building portfolio
11. Pilot 2 – What happened?
Deakin University CRICOS Provider Code: 00113B
• Most learners still didn’t engage with reflective prompts
– Platform as repository for assessment task
• Some learners really did explore the platform
– Building own portfolio -> continued activity
– Noted opportunities to use portfolios in their own teaching/learning
design practice
12. Lessons learned
Deakin University CRICOS Provider Code: 00113B
• Learning design is key!
• Structure =/= simplicity
– Design for flexibility but provide exemplars
• Exploring new learning technologies is great – but don’t force it
– There must be a value-add
• There are benefits even when it goes wrong…