Debbie Oesch-Minor, Panel Coordinator

How would you describe your ePortfolio experience/expertise?

I teach writing and literature classes and have since 1997.

I am a teacher, advocate, and student of ePortfolios.

In my field, Rhetoric and Composition, we use portfolios as part of a process-oriented pedagogy: students brainstorm, research, write, rewrite, peer review, revise, and brainstorm more as they explore writing strategies and what works best for their composing purposes.

ePortfolios were a natural evolution for my classes. The shift from paper portfolios--clunky three ring binders--to ePortfolios was relatively smooth due to the support of ePortfolio gurus like Susan Kahn and Amy Powell.

I've used ePortfolios in first year writing classes, in Project-Based Learning courses where students partner with community clients, across a three-course themed learning community, and with an Advanced Leadership Training course for community leaders who support Grassroots maternal child health initiatives. In my professional life, I've used ePortfolios for annual reviews, presentations, and to close-out a grant.

I advocate for ePortfolio everything.

What does this look like?

  • Using ePortfolios to teach ePortfolios

  • Using micro-ePortfolios to share documents with community partners

  • Networking with other faculty to support students as they build ePortfolio across courses and coursework

  • Hyperlinking ePortfolios to showcase student work

  • Building professional ePortfolios to house presentations, documents, and reflections for faculty annual reviews

  • Designing an ePortfolio for the back-end of grants [including progress reports and reflective commentary]

  • Constructing ePortfolios as a learning management system when networking with community partners

  • Constructing/Managing shared ePortfolios--like this one--as part of presentations and work across time zones