Portfolio
A
portfolio is a purposeful collection of student work that exhibits the
student’s effort, progress and achievements in one or more areas of the
curriculum. The collection must include the following:
1. Student participation in the selection of contents;
2. Criteria for selection;
3. Criteria for judging merits; and
4. Evidence of a student’s self-reflection.
Portfolios
should represent a collection of student’s best work or best effort,
students-selected samples of work experiences related to outcomes being
assessed, and documents showing the growth and development of mastering
identified outcomes (Paulson & Meyer, 1991).
Portfolios,
in classrooms today, are derived from the visual and performing arts
tradition in which they serve to showcase artists’ accomplishments and
personally favored works. It may be a folder containing a students’
evaluation of the strengths and weaknesses of his/her works. It may also
contain one or more works-in-progress that illustrate the creation of a
product, such as an essay involving through various stages of
conception, drafting, and revision.
Purpose of Using a Portfolio
Portfolios
can enhance the assessment process by revealing a range of skills and
understanding of students; supporting instructional goals; reflecting
change and growth over a period of time; encouraging student, teacher,
and parent reflection; and providing for continuity in education from
one year to the next. Instructors can use portfolios for specific
purposes including;
1. Encouraging self-directed learning;
2. Giving a comprehensive view of what has been learned;
3. Fostering learning about learning;
4. Demonstrating progress toward identified outcomes;
5. Creating an intersection for instruction and assessment;
6. Providing a way for students to value themselves as learners; and
7. Offering opportunities for peer-supported growth.
Recent
changes in education policies, which emphasize greater teacher
involvement in designing curriculum and assessing students, have been an
impetus to increase portfolio use. Portfolios are valued as an
assessment tool because, as representations of classroom-based
performance, they can be fully integrated into the curriculum, and in
like separate tests, they supplement rather than take time away from
instruction. Moreover, many teachers, educators, and researchers
believed that portfolio assessments are more effective than “old style”
tests for measuring academic skills and informing instructional
decisions.
Characteristics of an Effective Portfolio
According to George (1995), portfolio assessment is a multi-faceted process characterized by the following recurrent qualities.
1. It is a continuous and ongoing, providing both formative
(ongoing) and summative (culminating) opportunities for monitoring
student’s progress toward achieving essential outcomes
2. It is multidimensional as it reflects a wide variety of artifacts and processes various aspects of the students’ learning.
3. It
provides for collaborative reflection, including ways for students to
think about their own thinking processes and met cognitive introspection
as they monitor their own, reflect upon their problem solving and
decision-making approaches and observe their emerging understanding of
the subjects and skills.
Although
approaches to portfolio development may vary, all the major researches
and literature on the portfolios reinforce the following
characteristics:
1. They
clearly reflect stated learner outcomes identified in the core or
essential curriculum that the students are expected to study.
2. They
focus the students’ performance-based learning experiences, as well as
their acquisition of the key knowledge, skills and attitudes.
3. They contain samples of work that stretch over an entire marking period, rather than single points in time.
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