Which is an example of a student portfolio assessment?

Writing a student portfolio is a lot of work. Often, we get overwhelmed because there is too much information and we don't know where to begin.

What is a student portfolio?

It is an intentional collection of work samples from each of the learning areas that takes place over a year or semester. Such work samples may include lessons from each learning area, student evaluations, photos and videos, notes, learning goals, and more.

Which is an example of a student portfolio assessment?

You can use portfolios as an instrument to record and showcase a student's progress over time. However, it’s vital to remember that portfolios are not just an album of memories for parents. When done improperly, portfolios are effective tools for showing parents how far their children have progressed and all the good work that the school has been doing.

Why are student portfolios important?

There are plenty of reasons why a student portfolio is important to not just the student, but to the teacher and parents as well.

A student portfolio can:

  • help your students feel proud of their achievements
  • provide students with an opportunity for self-reflection
  • provide a great starting point for goals setting
  • increase and improve home-school communication
  • display a compact profile of the student's capabilities
  • provide information for evaluation
  • provide information for parent-teacher conferences
  • make student handover easier
  • showcase the efficacy of your school programmes
Which is an example of a student portfolio assessment?

How to write a student portfolio?

Start by deciding how you want to store your student's work samples. Will you document it by creating individual files? Writing them down in a notebook? Printing your photos and pasting them in a binder? Do some research because there are plenty of templates for creating engaging and easy student portfolios here.

The essential thing to remember is that a student portfolio is a purposeful collection of work samples that celebrate each student's successes, strengths and areas for improvement.

Which is an example of a student portfolio assessment?

We recommend the following to ensure that you're creating a useful portfolio:

  1. Categorise the portfolio to demonstrate the student's progress according to early learning goals or standards identified by your curriculum. For example, if you record down a student's writing progress from the start to the end of the term, you can show how your students went from doodles and scribbling to writing readable words.
  2. Highlight the learning areas/domains that are involved in the lesson.
  3. Ensure that the portfolio provides parents with a clear understanding of what the lessons are and specifically what their child is achieving. Photos and videos will be helpful here.
  4. State observations so that parents have an idea on what to work at home.
  5. Aim to deliver a well-rounded portfolio, that shows both the child's successes and areas for improvement. Including photographs and videos are quick and an easy way to capture positive learning experiences as they speak volumes.
Which is an example of a student portfolio assessment?

Some schools opt to use a school management system to create digital student portfolios. Some systems even automate portfolio generation! For example, the LittleLives' Portfolio feature allows teachers to easily upload media, tick off learning areas, and jot down observations on the go. Keep up this simple habit throughout the semester, and ta-da, you will have a personalised digital portfolio for each child by the time parent-teacher conference comes around.

Digital portfolios also have the added advantage of allowing parents to view their child's progress at any point in the semester. This is a key way in which you can improve your relationship with parents.

Which is an example of a student portfolio assessment?

Lastly, we leave you with this: your portfolio does not have to show a perfect student. In fact, a portfolio is much more informative if you make sure to showcase the child's strengths, weaknesses, and uniqueness! Your portfolio should be a genuine reflection of your student in class, and stepping stone for planning out the rest of their journey in school.

Paulson et al (1991) provide a useful definition to start our thinking about the value of portfolios as a means to assess student achievement:

“a purposeful collection of student work that exhibits the student’s efforts, progress and achievements in one or more areas. The collection must include student participation in selecting contents, the criteria for selection, the criteria for judging merit and evidence of student self-reflection.”

There are several important messages in the definition that will form themes of this briefing paper:

  • purposeful: as with all methods of assessment the purpose is to evidence the learner’s achievement of the intended learning outcomes
  • collection: portfolios should include many different forms of evidence of attainment: written; posters; artefacts; recordings [video and audio]; photographs; etc. The individual components may focus on particular learning outcomes, whilst the whole should evidence broader outcomes and success
  • student participation in selecting
    • contents: many years ago as an external examiner my first experience of a portfolio arrived in a huge box. Everything, including the kitchen sink, appeared to be in there. It seemed that I, as the assessor, was supposed to select which of this myriad of evidence proved achievement / competence. No, that is one of the student’s tasks ….
    • the criteria for selection: one value of portfolio assessment is that we give choices and responsibility to the student / learner. As assessors we provide the boundaries within which the student is working, but they have a say over why they think this particular piece of evidence - this component of the portfolio - satisfies the criteria
    • the criteria for judging merit: we may go further and give, or share, responsibility with the learner about the criteria that will be used to decide achievement
  • evidence of student self-reflection: another value of portfolio assessment is that we can require learners to analyse and reflect on their learning. In this way we are promoting and developing the ability to be self-critical and become autonomous learners; knowing what they know, realising what they need to know and deciding how they will achieve that further learning.

Lastly, in this overview of the method, is format. The portfolio can be (as mentioned above) in physical form as papers, objects, and recorded media, but it can be just as well be electronic: an e-portfolio. Warwick staff and students will have access to Mahara (https://myportfolio.warwick.ac.uk).

What can portfolios assess?

Whilst many of the individual items that are included in a portfolio will be short-term, in that they are produced at a particular stage of the course and capture evidence of achievement at that stage, the portfolio itself will be a long-term, sustained piece of work. Additional values of portfolios are: (1) that the learner can return to elements of evidence and (based on formative feedback) update and enhance them; and (2) review their own learning over a period of time and reflect on their achievement and, ideally, move into double-loop learning (Argyris & Schön, 1974 and Anderson 1997) and think about how they learn as well as what they have learned.

This means that portfolios can be used to assess a wide-range of achievements and abilities but would only be recommended as a mean of assessment if the learning outcomes of the module / course include the meta-learning / reflective aspects.

As will be noted in the design section below, a portfolio may include aspects that are not submitted for the final assessment, but may be useful for evidence of learning beyond the outcomes of the module and learners could rewrite sections to re-present the evidence to gain future study / employment opportunities or professional recognition.

Design

Whilst here we are particularly concerned with the idea of a portfolio for assessment purposes it is worth thinking, even briefly, of the different types of portfolio and their uses as this background may be a useful means to ‘sell’ the idea to students; portfolios are a lot of work for both assessed and assessors and we need to be able to convince our learners of their value.

Working portfolio: or portfolio in waiting as I prefer to think about it. This is basically the collection / holding tank for all the materials that a learner may accumulate to use; it is work-in-progress. The definition above included student choice over what was presented; this is the wider collection that they are selecting from. This idea also links to the notion of the portfolio containing items that could be used for several purposes as discussed in the previous section. All of the collected work is, of course, linked to the learning outcomes but, after formative feedback, may be revised and selected from to respond to the assessment brief. As already noted, one important aspect of portfolio assessment is reflection across the collection to show what and how learning has taken place. It is during this reflective, double loop stage of the portfolio development that selection should occur.

Showcase portfolio: This is a collection of the best work and may go beyond the particular module / course. A student could collect work from across their degree course to use for job or further study application and / or professional recognition. As Danielson & Abrutyn (1997) say, a showcase portfolio allows a learner to say “Here's who I am. Here is what I can do.” This version of the portfolio is simply a selection from the working portfolio.

Assessment portfolio: the primary function of an assessment portfolio is to evidence what a student has learned and achieved against the intended learning outcomes. Depending on how the portfolio is originally defined this may be all of the work-in-progress portfolio or may be a selection.

How the portfolio is originally defined is the important point here. If the portfolio is defined just to address the outcomes of one module or course then it is likely that the working and assessment portfolios will be very similar; there will be a fairly narrow definition of purpose, content and expectation. If, however, the portfolio is seen to have a longer life then it will be available for the learner to use as all of the above. Many professions now require a portfolio for continuing professional development (cpd) purposes. These long-term records can be started during a first degree and then taken forward as needed; this is certainly a value of an e-portfolio which is transferable and mobile. Some universities now require academic staff members to maintain a portfolio that documents teaching even beyond any early-career development programmes.

Danielson & Abrutyn (ibid) outlined eight steps in designing an assessment portfolio system, building on those we suggest six crucial steps for designing valid portfolio assessment:

  1. determine the curricular outcomes to be addressed through the portfolio; the intended learning outcomes must be clear and broad-reaching including reflective / meta learning aspects to make portfolio assessment valid
  2. determine the decisions that will be made based on the portfolio assessments; will individual elements carry marks / grades or just the complete portfolio or a mixture of both, and in the latter case what are the relative weightings and why
  3. design assessment tasks for the curricular outcomes; constructive alignment must rule here and the tasks must measure the knowledge, skills and approaches / attitudes (at the appropriate level of difficulty / sophistication) that students are expected to attain. This will will ensure the validity of the assessment
  4. define / agree the criteria for each assessment task and the overall portfolio, as appropriate, and establish standards for each criterion
  5. decide formative assessment points and what feedback (judgement) and feed-forward (development) pointers will be given
  6. determine who will assess what: self, peers and staff can all contribute here.

Finally, returning to the requirement that students reflect on their learning through the portfolio:

  • at the most basic level we could require them to map the contents of their portfolio to the learning outcomes using a grid
  • at the next level we could ask that they write claims outlining explicitly how their work provides evidence that they have met the criteria and to what level
  • if we have allowed choice of elements from their (working) portfolio we could also ask that they explain why they have selected certain tasks over others.

These exercises force the student to focus on the content of the portfolio. The next stage is to concentrate on the process of developing the portfolio and require them to analyse their learning - how and what - as a result of undertaking the building of the portfolio, and still further, to reflect on what else they need to do to master the content / skills addressed.

Diversity & inclusion

By including a range of different tasks completed in a range of formats we are enabling all students to exhibit their achievements. Further, by allowing selection from a range of tasks we add to the student control over the process.

Academic integrity

As portfolios are developed over time, we are able to track the development of the work making it very difficult to include work that has been plagiarised. The requirement of critical reflection further ensures that it is difficult to copy /plagiarise. (Click here for further guidance on plagiarism.)

Student and staff experience
Benefits

Portfolios include work that is produced over an extended period and should require a wider range of skills in its production. As a result students may view it as a fairer form of assessment. Given the opportunity to be involved in

  • designing of the individual tasks
  • deciding the criteria to be used
  • selection of content to present
  • peer assessment

and the longer-term opportunities afforded by portfolio assessment all add to the attractiveness of the method.

Deciding on an e-portfolio rather than a paper-based version has further benefits (Madden, 2007) including:

  • cost-efficient means to store a large amount of material, allowing a range of media types to be included
  • easy sharing of the portfolio and, by selecting permissions, selective sharing of content
  • easy to adapt and so use for more than one purpose
  • ease to update, add to and delete from the content
  • developing additional IT skills
  • opportunities to display in a number of ways and so suit different purposes; showcase and assessment roles.
Challenges

For students

Developing a portfolio is time consuming and if the range of tasks does not go beyond the ‘usual’ (essays, short answers , mcqs etc.) then there will be little motivation to engage and to invest the time. Counter to this, requiring production in a range of formats (audio, video, blogs, etc.) and as an e-portfolio may add time demands as students have to learn how to produce new formats, master editing techniques and gain competence in the use of additional technologies.

All of these concerns can be mitigated by providing advice and guidance on the techniques and underlining the added values of the method.

For staff

  • assessing portfolios can be time-consuming, especially as they can provide evidence of more than the usual disciplinary knowledge and understanding
  • building in student choice, whilst a positive in terms of developing autonomous learners, can be challenging when trying to ensure that the assessment of the portfolio is consistent and reliable
  • over-assessing if we are not careful about weighting elements and making this clear to learners.
Workload

Students

Time consuming but has the potential to generate great benefits.

For staff

Time consuming - but all good assessment is. The Strivens (2006) report lists twelve strategies, identified by surveying users of portfolios, to mitigate workload; well worth considering.

Useful resources

Hamp-Lyons, L. and Condon, W. (2000). Assessing the Portfolio: Principles for Practice, Theory and Research. Cresskill, NJ: Hampton Press, Inc.

Klenowski, V. (2002). Developing Portfolios for Learning and Assessment: Processes and Principles. Abingdon UK: Routledge-Falmer

Madden, T (2007). Supporting Student e-Portfolios - The purpose of this guide is to provide a basic introduction to e-portfolios: what they are how they are being used potential benefits and challenges technical implications and how they might be introduced. https://s3.eu-west-2.amazonaws.com/assets.creode.advancehe-document-manager/documents/hea/private/eportfolios_jisc_1568036898.pdf

Strivens, J. (2006). Efficient assessment of portfolios. The Centre for Recording Achievement. - An account of ways in which portfolios are used efficiently by:

  • describing portfolio practice in a minimum of five professional courses with large student cohorts
  • identifying efficient practices
  • discussing trade-off between educational effectiveness and efficiency
  • providing advice on the design of affordable portfolio assessment.

https://www.advance-he.ac.uk/knowledge-hub/efficient-assessment-portfolios

University of Edinburgh. Institute for Academic Development. - Some further ideas, guidance and sample portfolios

https://www.ed.ac.uk/institute-academic-development/learningteaching/staff/assessment/resources/techniques/portfolios

What are examples of student portfolios?

That means a portfolio could include anything from samples of writing the child has done, tests the student has completed, pictures of the child in the classroom, notes from a teacher about things the child has said or accomplished, self-assessments by a student, and more.

What are the 3 types of portfolio assessment?

There are three different types of portfolios: process, product, and showcase. Although each type is compiled for a different audience, all have a developer, purpose, spe- cific audience, and reflection section (discussed in Chapter 3) for reflecting on the evidence.

What are the 4 types of portfolio?

4 Common Types of Portfolio.
Conservative portfolio. This type is also called a defensive portfolio or a capital preservation portfolio. ... .
Aggressive portfolio. Also known as a capital appreciation portfolio. ... .
Income portfolio. ... .
Socially responsible portfolio..

What is an example of assessment for students?

Examinations, finals, quizzes, and graded papers are examples of summative assessments that test student knowledge of a given topic or subject. These graded assessments and assignments are often high stakes and are geared towards testing students.