final e portfolios presentation

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E-Portfolios EDUC 7101: Diffusion and Integration of Technology in Education Charlotte Vaughn

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Page 2: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Why E-Portfolios in the Elementary Setting?

Increase student engagement Foster collaboration among students Provide alternative ways to assess and

evaluate in a classroom setting Tool for capturing, storing and examining

student work Allow students to help explain their

understanding of content, skills, and knowledge

Page 4: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Stage 2- Research

Research: The Inter/National Coalition for Electronic Portfolio Research is an organization that convenes research/practitioners to study the impact of e-portfolios on student learning and educational outcomes (Inter/National Coalition, 2009).

Page 5: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Stage 2- Research Continuation

2005- the I/NCePR launched a team working with other teams from campuses with e-portfolio initiatives to help pursue campus based research about e-portfolios.

2009- the I/NCePR has launched its fifth cohort the team has worked with over 50 campuses on topics concerning e-portfolios

Page 6: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Stage 2- Researched Continuation

E-portfolios use is growing significantly, but without a major organization guiding or monitoring its growth it lacks the components to become a field. The literature on e-portfolio use is increasing, but it is still scattered and supplies pieces of e-portfolio use.

Page 7: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Stage 2- Research Continuation

However, the use of e-portfolios in higher education continues to increase steadily. A review of the conference proceedings supports the increase popularity (Ring, 2008).

Page 8: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Stage 3-Development

Development: During the development process some concerns that arise are increase workload for faculty and student concerns about how to use the e-portfolio in their search for employment and promote professional development and to make assessments.

Page 9: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Stage 3- Development Continuation

The intended audience for this innovation is higher education, but e-portfolios can be an effective tool for the elementary age group with the expansion of technology use in the elementary schools.

Page 10: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Stage 4-Commericialization

Commercialization: The most effective marketing strategy is through example. Many times workshops are provided that focus on designing e-portfolio friendly assignments.

Page 11: Final E Portfolios Presentation

The Innovation-Decision ProcessKnowledge

What are E-portfolios? How will it work in my classroom? Why does it work?

Page 12: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Knowledge

E-portfolio is a digital collection of student work.

E-portfolios can be used as an alternative form of assessment and evaluation of student understanding in a classroom setting.

E-portfolios work because they enhance student center active learning and they provide a way to measure student learning.

Page 13: Final E Portfolios Presentation

The Innovation-Decision ProcessPersuasion

Increase student center active learning Alternative to traditional assessment with

a focus on standards Increase student collaboration Increase student reflection Help students develop metacognitive

skills E-portfolios help make learning visible Foster student motivation Engage all types of learners

Page 14: Final E Portfolios Presentation

The Innovation-Decision ProcessDecision

All schools assess student learning. Teachers are held accountable for student

learning and student mastery of standards.

E-portfolios has adapted to needs and priorities of a diverse group of students.

Provides a holistic assessment on student learning.

Adopt or reject e-portfolios.

Page 15: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Innovation-Decision ProcessImplementation

Attend workshops on e-portfolios Demonstrate and model how to

create e-portfolios Have students create e-portfolios Have students share their e-

portfolios in small groups Share e-portfolios with parents

during conferences

Page 16: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Innovation-Decision ProcessConfirmation

Students share their e-portfolio with peers and parents.

Teachers and students discuss the progress of growth and learning throughout the school year.

Students are motivated to add work to their e-portfolio throughout the school year.

Page 17: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Innovation-Decision ProcessConfirmation

Students can visual examine and determine their growth and learning throughout the school year.

E-portfolios provide an alternative way to assess students.

Page 18: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Standard Technology Adoption S-curve

Page 19: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Roger’s Innovation Adoption Curve

Page 20: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Emerging Technologies Curve

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S-Curve Explanation for E-portfolios

Diffusion of new technology takes time and typically follow a non-constant adoption rate.

New technologies diffuse slowly until they reach critical mass.

Many universities are at the beginning of the e-portfolio adoption curve.

(Reese&Levy,2009)

Page 22: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Reasons for slow adoption rate

Users are searching for a meaningful problem

Perceived cost of adoption Lacking a shared definition of e-portfolios,

coordinated implementation/support strategy

Insufficient integration with other information technology

(Reese&Levy,2009)

Page 23: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Innovators and Early Adopters

Teacher Education- Schools, colleges and departments of education are the innovators and early adopters of e-portfolios.

Page 24: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Strategies for Innovators and Early Adopters to Adopt E-Portfolios

Trailability- have an opportunity to experiment with innovation on a limited basis

Observability- visually see how others have integrated or utilized e-portfolios in their schools or institutions

Page 25: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Strategies to move Laggards towards Adoption of E-Portfolios

Provide additional information about the significance and benefits of e-portfolios.

Provide workshops on e-portfolios. Provide workshops and training on

ways to implement and utilize new technologies in classroom instruction and assessment.

Page 26: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Laggards

Those searching for a meaningful or a well-defined problem for which e-portfolios are the solution.

Educators and students that need additional support and training using various types of multimedia software and technologies to create e-portfolios.

Page 27: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Perceived Attributes

Critical attributes that will help e-portfolios meet critical mass in education is observability and relative advantage. If teachers given the opportunity to see the success of others utilizing e-portfolios they may be willing to adopt.

Relative advantage- Gather student work to represent performance task and mastery of standards and you do not have to worry about storage space.

Page 28: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Approach Towards Adoption

Decentralized approach will fit best for the adoption of e-portfolios in our district.

Peer diffusion Experimentation Fits closer to users needs and

problems User control

Page 29: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Change Agent

Key Change Agent- Literacy and Math CoachSeven Roles of a Change Agent1.Develop a need-Standards based and 21st

century classroom.2.Information Exchange- provide resources

and collaboration among staff members.3.Diagnose problems- unable to provide

proof of meeting the standards using performance task and technology.

Page 30: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Change Agent Continued

4.Intent to change- benefits and success of e-portfolios in classrooms.

5.Intent to action-encourage collaboration about e-portfolios success and benefits.

6.Stabilize adoption-provide training and additional resources.

7.Achieve terminal relationship-utilize e-portfolios

Page 31: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Critical Mass

E-portfolios have yet to reach critical mass in grades K-12.

Strategies to Reach Critical Mass Introduce to intact groups in the district

that are relatively more innovative. Target highly respectable individual in the

district for initial adoption.

Page 32: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Final Thoughts on E-portfolios

“Emerging technologies have the potential to be the most powerful when they change pedagogy and content, not when they are merely automated” (Dede, 2008).

Page 33: Final E Portfolios Presentation

Final Thoughts on E-portfolios

“The growth of e-portfolio use is directly related to its elasticity, to the diversity of purposes for which it can be used, including enriched learning and improved career development, transfer and assessment” (Clark& Eynon, 2009, p.18)

Page 34: Final E Portfolios Presentation

“I hear and I forget. I see and I remember. I do and I understand.” -Chinese Proverb

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References

Buzzetto-More, N. & Alade, A. (2008). The pentagonal e-portfolio model for selecting, adopting, building and implementing an e-portfolio. Journal of Information Technology Education, Vol.7, 45-70

Dede, C. (2008). Prediffusion. Laureate Education, Inc. Baltimore: Author

Clark, J. & Eynon, B. (2009, Winter). E-portfolios at 2.0-surveying the field. Peer Review, The Association of American Colleges and Universities

Inter/National Coalition for Electronic Portfolio Research.(2009) Electronic portfolio research. Retrieved from http://ncepr.org/index.html

Page 36: Final E Portfolios Presentation

References

Reese, M. & Levy, R. (2009). Assessing the future:e-portfolio trends,uses, and options in higher education. Educause, Vol.2009,(4), 1-12

Ring, G.,Weaver, B. & Jones, J.(2008, Fall). Electronic portfolios: engaged students create multimedia-rich artifacts,4(2), 1-1

Rogers, E. M. (2003). Diffusion of innovations (5th ed.). New York: Free Press.