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    Becoming an eportfolio teacher.

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    Author
    Hughes, Julie
    Keyword
    Blogs
    Weblogs
    E-portfolios
    Teacher education
    
    Metadata
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    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/2384/294675
    Abstract
    This book: Higher education institutions of all kinds - across the United States and around the world - have rapidly expanded the use of electronic portfolios in a broad range of applications including general education, the major, personal planning, freshman learning communities, advising, assessing, and career planning. Widespread use creates an urgent need to evaluate the implementation and impact of e-portfolios. Using qualitative and quantitative methods, the contributors to this book—all of whom have been engaged with the Inter/National Coalition for Electronic Portfolio Research—have undertaken research on how e-portfolios influence learning and the learning environment for students, faculty members, and institutions. This book features emergent results of studies from 20 institutions that have examined effects on student reflection, integrative learning, establishing identity, organizational learning, and designs for learning supported by technology. It also describes how institutions have responded to multiple challenges in e-portfolio development, from engaging faculty to going to scale. These studies exemplify how e-portfolios can spark disciplinary identity, increase retention, address accountability, improve writing, and contribute to accreditation. The chapters demonstrate the applications of e-portfolios at community colleges, small private colleges, comprehensive universities, research universities, and a state system.
    Citation
    In: Cambridge, D., Cambridge, B. & Yancey, K. (Eds.) Electronic Portfolios 2.0: Emergent Findings and Shared Questions.
    Publisher
    Washington, DC: Stylus Publishing
    Collections
    Developing Pedagogy

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