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Creating a Successful Portfolio to Assess Student Learning Deborah A. Thompson

Creating a Successful Portfolio to Assess Student Learning Deborah A. ThompsonDeborah A. Thompson

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Creating a Successful Portfolio to Assess Student Learning

Deborah A. Thompson

Realizing Postsecondary and Career Readiness through CTE 2

Creating a Successful Portfolio to Assess Student Learning

Deborah ThompsonEducation & Training, Hospitality & Tourism, and Human Services

Career Cluster [email protected]

(615) 532-2840

www.tn.gov/education/[email protected]

Realizing Postsecondary and Career Readiness through CTE 3

Objectives

By the end of today’s session each of you will:1. Understand how to implement a portfolio to

assess your students. 2. Create a rubric to assess student learning through a

portfolio.

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Understanding the Student Portfolio

Realizing Postsecondary and Career Readiness through CTE

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What is a Portfolio?

What Is a Portfolio? A purposeful collection of student work that exhibits the

student's efforts, progress, and achievements in one or more areas of the curriculum.

A portfolio is NOT: A collection of assignments, without reflection or editing. A scrapbook of assignments.

A portfolio should be the following: A representation of student-selected work samples. Evidence of a student's self-reflection and outcomes being

assessed. Artifacts recording growth and development toward mastering

identified outcomes.

Realizing Postsecondary and Career Readiness through CTE

Realizing Postsecondary and Career Readiness through CTE 6

Why Use a Portfolio?

Portfolios enhance the assessment process by revealing a range of skills and understandings while reflecting change and growth over a period of time. Portfolios provide opportunity for documentation of continued growth from one year to the next.

A variety of specific purposes, including: Encouraging self-directed learning Demonstrating progress toward identified outcomes Creating an intersection between instruction and

assessment Providing a way for students to evaluate themselves as

learners

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Why Use a Portfolio?

They clearly reflect stated learner outcomes identified in the core or essential curriculum that students are expected to study.

They focus upon students' performance-based learning experiences as well as their acquisition of key knowledge, skills, and attitudes.

They contain samples of work that stretch over an entire marking period, rather than capture single points in time.

They contain works that represent a variety of different assessment tools.

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Portfolio Assessments

Portfolio assessments are continuous and ongoing, providing both formative and summative artifacts for monitoring students' progress toward achieving essential outcomes.

Portfolio assessments are multidimensional and exhibit a variety of artifacts and processes reflecting various aspects of students' learning processes.

Portfolio assessments are a collaborative reflection, including ways for students to reflect about their own thinking processes and metacognitive introspection as they monitor their own comprehension.

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What to include in a Portfolio?

Each course has a recommended list of artifacts to include in the student’s portfolio. This is not an exhaustive list of artifacts, rather suggestions.

What are some other items to include?

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Example Rubric

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How to Create a Portfolio Rubric

1. Identify what to include in portfolio2. How will you assess the artifact?

• Outline the elements or critical attributes to be evaluated. • Remember that these attributes must be objectively measurable.

3. Create an evaluative range for performance quality under each element; for instance, “excellent,” “good,” “unsatisfactory.”

4. Add descriptors that qualify each level of performance:• Avoid using subjective or vague criteria such as “interesting” or

“creative”; instead, outline objective indicators that would fall under these categories.

• The criteria must clearly differentiate one performance level from another.

5. Assign a numerical scale to each level.Additional resources on creating rubrics can be found at

http://www.tncore.org/literacy_in_science_and_technology/assessment/scoring_resources.aspx

Realizing Postsecondary and Career Readiness through CTE 12

You Do

Now, create a rubric for four course artifacts for implementation in the upcoming school year.

Resources: Consultant Group Partners Example Rubrics Course Standards