Zanzucchi, A., & Truong, M.
(2013). Thinking like a program: How
electronic portfolio assessment shapes faculty development practices. In H.A. McKee, & D.N. DeVoss, D. N. (Eds.), Digital
writing assessment & evaluation (n.p). Logan,
UT: Computers and Composition Digital Press/Utah State University Press.
Retrieved from http://ccdigitalpress.org/dwae/14_zanzucchi.html
The article should
be generally helpful to institutions seeking to develop or improve an
eportfolio approach. The authors include enough information about the faculty development
workshops that they have developed to offer an overview of what another
institution might do. Links back to their program page can also offer some
ideas about the sorts of resources that institutions might use to support
faculty. Although it is not the main
idea of the article, it also offers some impressions about the degree to which
an institution might unify practices.
For example, by having shared assessment activities and offering
workshops, the program can foster a shared philosophy for teaching and
assessing writing. However within this
loose framework, instructors can still develop their own assignments. But the fact that all instructors use the
eportfolio and the fact that the rubrics are shared means that assessment is
done in very similar ways for all classes. This means that students have the
confidence that their experiences are in alignment with those of other students
in other sections. It also makes the
task of instructors easier. The
desirability of using faculty development to find a balance between shared and
diverse instructional practices is a key insight of the article.
In terms of my own experience within my
institution, this article offered me some good ideas for taking back to our
writing program coordinator. We do not
use eportfolios and, in fact, do little with multimodal composing. I am not sure if there is much interest in
doing so. However, because we are
interested in bringing our diverse practices into greater alignment and because
we are forced by our accrediting body to evaluate a sample of student work, I
think I might be able to sell the idea of an eportfolio. We already have composition meetings where we
meet and assess student papers, both for our accreditation requirements, and more
often, to ensure that we are teaching and assessing our students in similar
ways. It makes sense to do this same type of work with digital documents
instead of paper documents. By moving
towards digital documents, we might also bring more multimodal practices into
our writing program.
Laurie,
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed your response to Zanzucchi and Truong here. As a person who questions the special pedagogical and assessment value some programs are placing on ePortfolios (which is to say, I view them as a palliative response to an overall larger compositional concern and more complicated disciplinary questions which can't be resolved purely through multimodality), I am interested in the way that you are leveraging this text (and your later DWAE response) to look at the ePortfolio as a programmatic (and administrative) concern as well as a pedagogical one.
I look forward to seeing what else you do with this over the course of the semester.
-Alex
Laurie,
ReplyDeleteSince a lot of the reading seemed to look at eportfolios, it was interesting to see something about their use at the programatic level not just the course level. The idea of shared assessment and professional development activities reminded me of our discussions of communities of practice from Louise's Productive Theory class and it's interesting to think about how an assessment strategy has the potential to create a network of people.
-Kim