Showing posts with label digital portfolios. Show all posts
Showing posts with label digital portfolios. Show all posts

Friday, May 2, 2014

Linda Darling-Hammond points to the direction in PORTFOLIOS

When it comes to student testing in the United States, it is clear that changes are needed.   [Dr. Darling-Hammond quotes some surveys about public opinion of tests]
An Opportunity to Improve Assessment Systems
The assessments developed by two new multi-state consortia could move us toward more informative systems that include formative as well as summative elements, evaluate content that reflects instruction, and include some challenging open-ended tasks.
These assessments, though, will not include all necessary tasks and skills for students, such as long-term research and investigation tasks or the ability to communicate orally, visually, and with technology tools. These kinds of tasks are needed to develop and assess students’ abilities to find and use information to solve problems, explain different approaches to a problem, and explain and defend their reasoning. That is why some schools, districts, and states are developing more robust performance tasks and portfolios as part of multiple-measure systems of assessment. In addition to CCSS-aligned consortia exams, multiple measures could include:
Please go to
tinyurl.com/darlingdp
  • Classroom-administered performance tasks (e.g., research papers, science investigations, mathematical solutions, engineering designs, arts performances);
  • Portfolios of writing samples, art works, or other learning products;
  • Oral presentations and scored discussions; and
  • Teacher rating of student note-taking skills, collaboration skills, persistence with challenging tasks, and other evidence of learning skills.
These activities not only engage students in more intellectually challenging work that reflects 21st century skills, they also serve as learning opportunities for teachers, when they are involved in using the assessments and scoring them together.




Let's look at those two points:

  • Portfolios of writing samples, art works, or other learning products;
  • Oral presentations and scored discussions
This is why I request students to talk about their

 projects onto a video which is posted on 

Youtube, even if the only thing we look at is the 

poster, as long as we hear the students talking 

about their projects and their learning process.



I hope parents take time to read these 

statements.

Here is the link to Linda Darling-Hammond's observations

THE ARTICLE      http://tinyurl.com/darlingdp

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Most students want to get a higher score on the SAT or ACT ... maybe their bigger goal is "How do I show that I'm outstanding?" Use a digital Portfolio to highlight how you take initiative and show the Seven Survival Skills

Some people think that it's a good idea to 



Digital PortfoliosHere is the link to Benjamin's Portfolio

Digital Portfolio for 10th Grade

The Project ... click here

Here is an example of a Portfolio's Blog

Click here and visit Tony's website
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  • Many students want a higher ACT or SAT score.


  • The bigger goal is to get into an excellent university

  • Students will benefit from reading the first chapter of Dennis Littky's book.   Most students don’t take the time.  It is a shame....  CHAPTER ONE

  • Unfortunately, to most people, teaching is the giving of knowledge. What are you going to tell the students? What is your expertise? But teaching is really about bringing out what's already inside people.
  • Dennis Littky
  • Schools that are serious about fulfilling every student's promise must develop structures and relationships that nurture the strengths and energies of each student. Truly personalized learning requires reorganizing schools to start with the student, not the subjects or classes. A school that tries to take personalized education to its full potential is equally concerned with what knowledge students acquire as with how the individual students use and apply that knowledge. The priority at such a school is to know students and their families well enough to ensure that every learning experience excites the students to learn more. There are many great small, personalized schools that do all of this. What I'm saying is, they need to take the idea of personalized learning to the next step: to where every student has a completely different curriculum, based on who he or she is right now and who he or she wants to become.
Central to the idea of treating everyone alike differently is understanding that there cannot be a uniform curriculum for every student in the country—or for every student in a single school or classroom, for that matter. Force-feeding kids a rigidly defined body of knowledge is in total opposition to what we know about learning. Everything I know about kids tells me that there is no content that's right for every kid.
  • Go ahead... click here and read this
    You can also get an idea about the power of digital portfolios (as used at highTechHigh.org)




  • Most admission officers want to create a community that is interesting on their campus.  Most officers do not want to admit “well-rounded” students.  They want “spiky” students.

  • Can you show that you are UNUSUAL or OUTSTANDING in some area?

  • What says more about you, your test scores?  Your GPA?  Grade Point Average?

  • Or a Powerpoint that you created?

  • How about showing the world the work that you did in the past three years in school?

  • What do you think about visiting this list?

  • Have you given a speech?  Are you proud of your work?

  • Why not show the world an essay and make a video to explain the highlights of the essay.

  • Yes, you can make a video on YOUTUBE and you don’t have to show your face.  Point the camera at your essay and perhaps at five useful websites that you discovered when you searched for information on your topic.

  • What did you do to persuade people to change their behavior?


  • What did you do that shows that you are a person who takes INITIATIVE?

  • Tony Wagner of Harvard points out that there are SEVEN SURVIVAL SKILLS.  Can you show a project for each of these skills?  Can you show projects that demonstrate how you have these skills:

  • Collaborate
    Communicate    Tony Wagner's list
    use Curiosity
    Imagination
    Access and Analyze information
  • Agility and Adaptability
  • Initiative and Entrepreneuring
  • Critical Thinking (can you solve Lateral Thinking Puzzles?)

  • Here's an example of a video that I made to highlight and link my projects.
Search on Yahoo for "Steve McCrea
Transform Education"
Search on Google for "Steve McCrea
Transform Education"


Look what happens when we search "Steve McCrea
Transform Education" with IMAGES

  • Notice that “finding the square root of 132” and “factoring the difference of two square numbers” and using a matrix are not in the Tony Wagner list.

  • Here are other ideas about PORTFOLIOS
    Making a website?
    Starting a YOUTUBE campaign?
    Creating a Facebook page or group?

  • Yes, those projects show initiative

  • If you are interested in creating a digital portfolio, do the following, please
  • a)  create a Gmail account.
    b)  Visit Drive.google.com and learn how to upload files and documents, photos and videos.
    c)  create a Youtube account.
    d)  collect the materials that you have created for school (papers, reports, projects) and put them on a table
    e)  borrow a camera and point the camera at a project and start talking.
  • f) make a tour of your town and show how you know something about the history of your area.   Oh, you don’t have much to say?  Then prepare by visiting the local websites and take us on a virtual tour using your computer the Internet.

  • If you want more ideas, call (954) 646 8246 and I’ll show you how to create a DIGITAL PRESENCE and how to make yourself seen.

  • The goal is to connect YOUR NAME and A PROJECT that is near to your heart.


  • For example   “STEVE McCrea” and “Transform Education”  gives a lot of information.





Saturday, December 21, 2013

Digital Portfolios come to East Side High in New Jersey (with VIDEOS!)

Click HERE   This skeleton of a digital portfolio was assembled in 30 minutes.   That's the power of Google Sites and Google Drive.

https://sites.google.com/site/jasminerdigitalportfolio/more-about-digital-portfolios

Have a look . . .



This is a typical digital portfolio at High Tech High
... built on Google SITES software.  What can a student
at East Side High produce? (in 30 minutes)


This is the portal to the Digital Portfolios of
High Tech High.  CLICK HERE to introduce
your students and teachers to another way of
sharing our students' work


Give a click!

If you know how to use Google Drive
If you know how to use Google's SITES web-making software
If you would rather see a student's actual work rather than a transcript's report of the Grade Point Average,
then you are ready for introducing Digital Portfolios to students.

The procedure is described by Dennis Yuzenas and Matt Blazek (projects) at these locations
Dennis Yuzenas

Matt Blazek


See Matt's description of the "List of Projects" CD



If you are a teacher and you want some tips about how to set up a digital portfolio, you can see the structure in Jasmine's blog.

Standards:
1. No personal information (the student might wnat to put her actual name, but I encourage everyone to call themselves "Fred Jones at Indiana Middle School in Freeport, Ind.")
2. No email links to a "REAL" ;email address, but you can invite comments to the site.
3.  ADD YOUTUBE videos to allow visitors to HEAR the "performance of understanding" or exhibition of the student's learning.   High Tech High DPs don't generally have video components, so the East Side High version will be the next step in the evolution of DPs.  The VIDEO does NOT have to show the face of the student.  Shy students can hide behind the camera and simply give a tour of a poster or book or report by describing what was learned.  See the videos at River Cities Communities Charter School... 

CLICK HERE to see some suggestions about how to organize a Digital Library (on Google Drive and Youtube) showing exhibitions.
CLICK here