|
This blog will document Helen Barrett's experience using the Maricopa e-portfolio system.
|
|
|
Feedback to the Developer of this tool
Thanks for the message, and converting my Excel file. Actually, I tried it (and wrote about it in this
blog). I was never happy with the results/layout. I am spoiled by Acrobat maintaining the exact look
of the document. I have a plug-in, so I can read PDF files within my browser. I also
made all the links active, so I could navigate to artifacts with my browser from that PDF file.
I think Windows users can open the Excel file directly, but I haven't tried browsing the portfolios with
my husband's Windows computer.
First of all, I want to tell you how easy and flexible I found the tool. I really
liked the variety of pages, the fact that I could have more than one type of collection for
different purposes. I really don't think you should make the text box at the top of each
collection page "optional" because the reader should know why these specific items were selected. This space encourages meta-reflection
on this group of artifacts.
At first, I thought the pull-down menu to access pages was awkward, But I got used to it very
quickly. It keeps the page less cluttered, although I have used other systems that give you a navigation
bar along the left side (like my Blogger template or Manilla) or along the right side (like my
WordPress blog).
If you wanted to add features to the portfolio, let me make some suggestions after my first impression
of 8 hours working with it:
My name only appears on the pages where I place it. I think it should go into
the Header, right around the Maricopa ePortfolio link. Or put it on the bar where you have Contact, SiteMap
and Subscribe links.
As I was putting together my portfolio last night, I needed an advanced organizer. That is why I
created the Excel matrix. I wasn't sure how I wanted to categorize my artifacts, nor did I have
any idea how many total that I wanted to use. The second stage of developing an e-portfolio, after
determining your purpose and audience, is creating a digital archive of your work (the collection process).
I decided to only use those items that I knew were already on my website so that
I just had to identify the URLs, something that is probably not appropriate for the average portfolio developer.
So my Excel spreadsheet became the tool where I made a list of my artifacts, wrote the captions
as comments (the context for the artifact), and eventually decided which category it fit. For many students, they are
uploading the files as they develop them in class, so that step is not an issue for them.
But for faculty who might want to create a portfolio for any purpose, who already have a collection
of Word documents and PPT presentations, this might be useful. I often have participants in a workshop create
a simple Excel spreadsheet and hyperlink to files that they have brought with them or that I
provide as example artifacts. Then we have those files all categorized for our reflective portfolio development activity,
What was missing for me in this tool was an inventory of my artifacts that my matrix
represented, Here is what I wanted to do in the tool: Create an archive of all my artifacts. Perhaps
it is a form that I complete that lets me fill in a title, a caption, the location URL
(or upload a document), much like you have in the collections page now, and a set of categories that
I can fill in for each item. Then, when I get ready to put together the Collections page, the
system will generate a list of items for each category. I can select which ones I want
to appear, and the system will automatically generate the page, using the captions that I entered when I uploaded
the file. It would be really nice if the system generated a matrix, as well, as a "Portfolio at
a Glance". I know that is part of the purpose of the site map, which I like, but it
only shows the pages, not the individual artifacts that I am using. I call that my digital archive, and
I would like to have an inventory of the artifacts that I have uploaded, and some way to
categorize them.
Another way to get at this is adding attachments to a blog entry. I envision that as
I am reflecting on my learning in my blog (my "learning" portfolio), I might want to upload a specific
piece of my work. Some artifacts might be a URL, but for most learners, it would be a document
(word, ppt, excel, etc.). I want to link to that document in my blog, but I also want a cross-reference list
of all attachments in my blog, so that I can find them later. I guess I want an
underlying content management system to organize and categorize my artifacts, so that I can re-use them at some
future time in my presentation portfolio. I know when I am doing a lot of cutting and
pasting, or re-entering data, that the computer can handle that task a lot more efficiently than I can.
Your portfolio is obviously developed as a learner-centered portfolio, not an institution-centered assessment management system. However, some institutions would
want to be able to add comments to the artifacts as well as the blog entries. I
have designed a system that balances the needs of the institution with the needs of the individual
learner (http://electronicportfolios.org/systems/paradigms.html ). If an institution sets up a database to hold the performance tasks with faculty
evaluation, all the learner needs to do is enter the URL of their artifact entry, with their reflection. Building
that capacity into the system means that you can eventually draw on the work in individual portfolios
for individual, institutional or program accountability, without interfering with individual creativity in the learners' own portfolios. We standardize the storage
of items into a digital archive for easy retrieval, but we never standardize the look and feel of
the portfolio itself.
Sorry for going on so long, but I know good software development is based on "use cases" so you
have mine.
|
Published
Sep 9, 2004 12:26 PM
Comment
|
|
|
|
Thank you so much for your feedback. I completely agree with the need
to have additional organizational structures (e.g., matrices) and indices (e.g., cross-references). I've seen what happens when the number of artifacts grows quite large. I will think about and prototype some of these ideas in the coming months and will welcome your continued feedback.
You'll see some of the smaller things introduced as well (e.g., name on the contact bar).
Thanks again,
Aud
|
Published
Sep 9, 2004 01:40 PM
|
|
|
Finished entries
It took me just an hour to finish all of the entries, which was mostly a copy/paste job
between the Excel spreadsheet and my web browser. Not too bad for 20+ entries. I think I'll work
on formatting later.
|
Published
Sep 9, 2004 04:15 AM
Comment
|
|
|
|
Helen - nice work on your ePort! Thanks for checking out the CGCC program. I am really enjoying visiting your links and reading everything. I am a visual person, so I really appreciate the images that you have included. - Dale
|
Published
Sep 9, 2004 10:17 AM
|
|
|
Portfolio at a Glance
I just spent the evening going through my web pages and my hard drive (my digital archive) to
select the specific artifacts that I wanted to use in my portfolio. I set up an Excel
spreadsheet that let me list the artifacts (21 in all) and then create hyperlinks to each URL. After
creating the list with the URLs, I added comments in Excel to represent the captions for each artifact.
I played around with converting the document into HTML, but spent too much time fighting the Microsoft style
sheet codes. So I just converted the document into PDF, which I will use on the WWW. I
uploaded the Excel spreadsheet to this portfolio as a document, but I might prefer using the PDF.
After selecting the artifacts, I tried to identify which competencies or skills each artifact demonstrates. I found five
or six major categories right now, maybe more when I think about it. But the major categories have
emerged. Now, all I have to do it create a collection for each grouping, and write an overall reflection
plus record the captions. Since I had all of the artifacts on one of my websites, all I
had to do was capture the URL.
From start to finish this project has taken me an evening, and most of the time was spent
in selecting the artifacts and writing the captions. Those aren't really technology issues...they are portfolio issues.
|
Published
Sep 9, 2004 03:11 AM
Comment
|
|
|
Getting Started
Thanks to Alan Levine for setting up this account for me. I want to try out this
tool as one implementation of electronic portfolio systems. I really like this option of this blog as
part of the portfolio system. I will try out some of the page formats and will upload
examples of artifacts. Creating the home page was very easy, and I will see how the rest of
the process goes.
|
Published
Sep 8, 2004 08:18 PM
Comment
|
|
|
|
|