{"id":1639,"date":"2002-09-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"2002-09-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost:8888\/cite\/2016\/02\/09\/article3-html-5\/"},"modified":"2018-10-09T14:03:05","modified_gmt":"2018-10-09T14:03:05","slug":"directions-in-electronic-portfolio-development","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/citejournal.org\/volume-2\/issue-4-02\/general\/directions-in-electronic-portfolio-development","title":{"rendered":"Directions in Electronic Portfolio Development"},"content":{"rendered":"

This article explores the advantages and trade-offs of two paths to the development of electronic portfolios – using generic tools and using customized systems. The analysis assumes that the goal of electronic portfolios is to stay focused on the quality of work by a learner and the valid alignment of their work to the standards and goals of education. A comparison of the “best of all worlds” scenarios for both approaches shows that the two approaches each have important strengths that need to be weighed during the process of program planning.<\/p>\n

Portfolios have been around a long time. Educators used them long before the digital age, which suggests that perhaps the new media and medium of electronic portfolios, in part, can be looked at through lenses from the past. For example, in the past, portfolios were assembled from collections of work stored in boxes or three-ring binders and now are stored in digital form. Electronic portfolios, according to Barrett (2002), are essentially a new kind of container and can be developed along two paths. One path uses generic tools (GT), such as word processing, HTML editors, multimedia authoring tools, portable document format (PDF), and other commonly used productivity tool software. The second path uses “information technology” customized systems approaches (CS) that involve servers, programming, and databases.<\/p>\n

What are the advantages and trade-offs of these two paths if the goal of electronic portfolios is to stay focused on the quality of work by a learner and its valid alignment to the standards and goals of education? By what criteria can the two approaches be compared?<\/p>\n

The significance of these questions arises in more than the technological sense of which methods best preserve the heart of traditional creative, reflective portfolio work. Because the new medium is so flexible, it can easily be used for practices that can work counter to the traditional goals of portfolios. For example, once they are digital and more easily stored and searched, e-portfolios might be used as high stakes gatekeepers, like standardized tests of today. Just because digital portfolios can be used this way, should they? Our discussion of directions in e-portfolio development should help clarify the differences in the political, human, and technological dimensions of e-portfolio decisions, identifying the trade-offs, strengths, and weaknesses.<\/p>\n

Criteria for Comparisons<\/b><\/p>\n

To begin the conversation about pluses and minuses of each kind of path, Barrett (2002) offered the following. The ability to aggregate data for assessment is counted as a plus for CS and a minus for GT, and the low start-up and maintenance costs count as a plus of GT (leaving the question of whether it is a plus or minus for CS). She also pointed to Mary Diez’ (1996) conception of the portfolio as “mirror, map, and sonnet.” These metaphors hint about possible criteria for the comparison of GT and CS approaches. The mirror concerns the portfolio’s reflective nature that allows learners to see their own growth over time. The map includes the portfolio’s ability to aid learners in planning, setting goals, and navigating the artifacts learners create and collect. And the sonnet points to the portfolio’s role as a framework for creative expression, encouraging diversity within a template or structure for thinking about work and presenting it to others.<\/p>\n

Also suggestive of criteria for the comparison of GT and CS, Davis (2002) noted the benefits of e-portfolios as providing flexibility in three important respects:<\/p>\n

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  1. Organizational flexibility.<\/li>\n
  2. Display flexibility of content and ideas<\/li>\n
  3. Ability to connect content to various schemas for representation in multiple ways, such as to standards, key concepts, interdisciplinary connections as well as linking works to one another.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n

    To these we could add Communications and Collaboration Tools, since e-portfolios provide not only a new container for work, but also a new process for producing, improving, and sharing it. Beyond these issues are considerations of the ways that e-portfolios actually change thinking and action through both the media and the processes of supported reflection in learning (Jonassen, Peck, & Wilson, 1999). These considerations provide a starting point for discussing the pluses and minuses of GT and CS as directions in electronic portfolio development, a list of criteria for comparing approaches.<\/p>\n