This is the first in a series of posts describing some work funded by Microsoft. We are posting in this format to invite reader comment and trackback. The work described below is an example of a learning portfolio, and this post is our problem statement.
Nils Peterson, Theron DesRosier, Jayme Jacobson, Gary Brown
Introduction
We have written about students’ changing technology proclivities and the changing landscape for Learning Management Systems (LMS) in this Microsoft white paper for EDUCAUSE 2007, in JOLT, Innovate, this blog, and in this interview). This document begins a case study of learners who use electronic portfolios to advance their learning. It does not explore uses of electronic portfolios as “showcases” of best work. The latter uses are facilitated by ePortfolio tools in several of the common LMS products and in several widely used Student Information Systems whose common trait is to facilitate institutional assessment, not learning.
The kinds of uses of ePortfolios we are examining are closely aligned with Personal Learning Environments (PLE). What we are finding in the cases that follow are users implementing what is suggested in Scott Wilson’s Future VLE diagram; an ad hoc, assemblage of Web 2.0 components (the term “Worldware” applies to the components). (Scott refers to a “VLE” (virtual learning environment) which might be either a personal or institutional learning environment. For our purposes here, read Scott as proposing a PLE.)
One of the questions we are exploring in this work is the potential of Microsoft SharePoint 2007 MySite Subsites (WSS) to serve as the central building block in Wilson’s Future VLE, a hub for the learner, and potentially a collaboration and/or presentation space for the learner or learner and segment of the community.
In this document, we prefer to retain the term “portfolio,” rather than PLE, for these activities because we want to connect to a body of literature on portfolio practices, including the commonly offered mantra: collect, select, reflect, connect and project (into the world). We draw a sharp distinction between the learning portfolio discussed here and the “showcase” or summative portfolio, especially when the creation of the portfolio is at the request of a third party for summative assessment purposes.
We also prefer the portfolio language to that of PLE because we value the learner consciously leaving a ‘learning trace’ as they work on a problem in the space, and we see the capturing and sharing of that trace is an important part of documenting learning. A recent employer poll supports this bias for richer documentation of learner skills. Some of our interest in this work began by documenting the learning trace that is evident in Hotz’ blog of his collaboration to unlock the iPhone.
In addition to Hotz, we have been examining electronic learning portfolios created by students and professionals at Washington State University, conducting interviews of them, which were captured with audio recordings, white board diagrams and/or both.
Several themes arise from studying these cases:
- Learning portfolios have a goal, or problem to solve;
- They adopt strategies that are public;
- They are implemented in multiple tools and spaces where collaborators are already present, or can be expected to congregate;
- They understand Social Capital, and the portfolio practitioner seeks to develop and leverage it;
- A key use of Social Capital and a reason to work in public is to develop an assessment community that can provide feedback and insights;
- The portfolio, especially its repository strategies attempt to facilitate reflection and synthesis to move the learner (and community) from information to idea to action;
- Users of Learning Portfolios work in multiple modes, including the arts, to convey their synthesis and call to action.
Other posts in this series can be found in this blog, under the category Learning Portfolio.

14 comments
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March 19, 2008 at 4:43 pm
NilsPeterson
When does a ‘learning portfolio’ begin or end?
March 19, 2008 at 4:53 pm
Nils Peterson
How is a showcase portfolio not solving a problem (such as creating a resume to get a job)?
March 19, 2008 at 5:07 pm
Nils Peterson
We are talking about portfolios that are more than assessment management engines for the institutional purposes. We are seeing learners that are working outside/inside the university in portfolios that are larger than the credentialing activities.
March 22, 2008 at 7:12 pm
Gary Brown
It occurs to me that perhaps the distinction between a showcase and learning/working portfolio might be drawn by articulating distinctions not in the ePortfolio but in the problem. The problem a showcase ePortfolio solves relies on the summative judgment of someone who is external to the portfolio and most likely has not been involved in the workings of the learning portfolio (though maybe influential in determining next steps in that ePortfolio). A learning/working portfolio, on the other hand, engages external agents in the process of solving the problem (though the workspace will not likely be entirely “contained” in the portfolio workspace.
March 22, 2008 at 7:16 pm
Gary Brown
The advantage to naming the “learning” portfolio rather than the “working” portfolio is the phenomenon that one might not learn when working. The advantage to the notion of a “working” portfolio is that it perhaps more fully engages a broader community of professionals within and beyond the educational institution. A working portfolio also tends to connote an ongoing project or activity. A learning portfolio connotes ones reflection, as in thoughts after reading Thoreau…
There are advantages in thinking of both, but problems adding a third category.
August 5, 2008 at 11:42 pm
Authentic assessment of learning in global contexts « Center for Teaching, Learning, & Technology
[...] on the WSU Critical Thinking Rubric to evaluate the portfolios. Since the contest, we have been distilling design principles for portfolios that facilitate [...]
September 12, 2008 at 11:26 pm
Digital Media and Learning Competition Results « Center for Teaching, Learning, & Technology
[...] project descriptions. The words have me thinking about some of the ideas we surfaced in our ePortfolios case studies. In one perspective collaboration is cheating and technologies are needed to prevent it. Another [...]
February 21, 2009 at 4:57 pm
pagi: ConversionJottit
[...] Case Studies of Electronic Portfolios for Learning [...]
February 21, 2009 at 7:24 pm
pagi: eLearning
[...] Case Studies of Electronic Portfolios for Learning [...]
March 4, 2009 at 2:16 am
Paul Beaufait
Helen Barrett refers to this post from a working document on Google:
http://docs.google.com/Doc?id=dd76m5s2_0gh3j2vct
To find out more about your work on learning portfolios, I tried the link at the end of this post (Case Studies of Electronic Portfolios for Learning, 2008.03.14):
http://wsuctlt.wordpress.com/category/learning-portfolio/
However, that link led to a page not found error message (2009.03.04).
Although the final sentence in that post (Case Studies …, above) suggests the existence of a category of posts on learning portfolios, the sidebar displays only an Uncategorized listing.
Categories, if implemented here, would provide a means of access in addition to the flat monthly archive, and the tags that you’ve used and displayed in the sidebar, for example:
http://wsuctlt.wordpress.com/tag/portfolio/
April 24, 2009 at 10:53 pm
Harvesting Gradebook in the Wild « Community-based learning
[...] theoretical physics, analogous to the concept that WSUCTLT has examined in its case studies for a workspace portfolio. Lisi describes [...]
May 29, 2009 at 3:32 pm
Google Wave unifies Workspace and Showcase Portfolios « Community-based learning
[...] conversation we have been having with Helen Barrett about Showcase vs Workspace ePortfolios. Our original, and her graphic. What seems to be important about Google Wave is the way it is a PLE and by [...]
August 1, 2009 at 2:06 pm
maximiseict
Nils,
You started this thread with the question, “When does a ‘learning portfolio’ begin or end?” I think that Helen Barrett has the right view, “From sperm to worm.” However, I am repeatedly frustrated by suggestions that we should have different e-Portfolios for different purposes, yes, different ‘views’ but all based on the one e-Portfolio.
Some examples:
A 5yr-old produces an impressive piece of artwork. Traditionally that work might have been put on display in the classroom or even the reception area of the school. However, the child’s teacher decides to digitally scan the artwork and save it to the child’s e-Portfolio, for all at home to see as well as relatives in other countries. – This is immediately a ’showcase’ item in this context. However, this is not presented at the end of the term or year – it is presented immediately to a controlled audience. The teacher also takes a copy (with parental permission) to use in her own e-Portfolio as an example of the work that she is doing with the children.
A 7yr-old writes in response to a scaffolded comprehension exercise. Based upon the individual’s reasoning the teacher provides suggestions and asks questions in order to help the child’s understanding. Here this is a ‘process’ whereby the understanding is developed rather than producing a ’showcase’ artefact.
A 9yr-old writes a poem and recites it to the rest of the class. The teacher has made a recording of the recitation and the child types up the poem and stores both in the e-Portfolio. This is not only a showcase item but is also a workspace item, inviting feedback, discussion or even peer-review from the reset of the class. On reflection the child adds another verse based upon suggestions made.
An 11yr-old uses a family mentor to suggest other lines of enquiry for a project the child is researching. The mentor looks at the work in progress and suggests contacting an ‘expert’. This, again is ’showcasing’ work in progress and also a ‘workspace’ activity.
A 13yr-old is in a class learning how to debate and present an argument. This activity does not start by producing an artefact but by reviewing a previously available article and then presenting opinions which the group then discusses. The individuals collate both their own and their group’s arguments. It is only in years to come that the learner reviews this document to understand something of their early powers of reasoning and what they learnt at that stage and how it helps their choice of studies in High School.
A group of 15yr-olds are given the task of writing a critique of all of the characters in a Shakespeare play. They decide to distribute the characters and each research one individual. The compilation is then taken by each individual who then checks out the accuracy of the references and generally revises the writing style and layout to suit their own purposes. This is obviously a case of collaboration, is safely contained within their e-Portfolio workspace but might never be used for ’showcasing’.
My argument, therefore, is that there is no required linearity of ‘create, store and display’. These are all on-going and very often cyclical activities. Not only that, the artefacts can be used for a variety of purposes such as formative feedback, collaboration, review and reflection and at different times throughout one’s learning.
To reiterate, I see an e-Portfolio as an on-going collation of selected materials (not everything) which can be used for a variety of purposes and may or may not be presented to different audiences. By using different ‘views’ for different audiences prevents the intended audience from seeing otherwise irrelevant materials.
August 3, 2009 at 9:53 pm
Nils Peterson
maximiseict, thanks for your thoughts and well illustrated examples and for bringing me back to look at what I said a year and a half ago. Now my thinking about Showcase and Workspace is changed. I see them as merged, the work/show-case. My current analogy is more like beads on a necklace, with some of the beads being bigger and showy, but needing the little beads to space them out into a composition.
I don’t think I agree with you that a learner will have one portfolio (I have worked in several blogs that I consider parts of my portfolio, but where I don’t work now. This is one of them.) I infer your K-12 context, and understand working with minors has implications, but more and more I’m thinking work should be in public. For more on that thinking see http://www.nilspeterson.com/2008/07/24/advice-to-a-web-20-learner/
Recently we’ve been talking about how the learner harvests feedback on their work, which you can explore if you work backward from this post. http://communitylearning.wordpress.com/2009/08/03/crowd-sourcing-feedback/