Module Assessment2 C4
Module Assessment2 C4
PORTFOLIO ASSESSMENT
TOPICS
LEARNING OUTCOMES
At the end of the chapter, you should be able to:
1. Plan portfolio assessment tools of a given subject/course.
2. Develop and evaluate portfolio assessment utilized in the classroom.
The practice of developing portfolio has been widely used in a number of fields for
many years such as in architecture, advertising, art, and photography. This includes the
person’s best work. In the field of education, portfolio has become widely used in the
basic and tertiary level, which is utilized as one of the many procedures for formally
assessing the students. It has become very useful in developing creativity and talents
of the students, allowing them to support the claim that have achieved learning
outcomes.
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set of evidence or artifact, a portable subset of these artifacts is collected and
displayed to another because they tell a specific story (Musial, 2009).
This has become a turning point of using portfolio as an alternative assessment tool
other than traditional testing. Presented on the next page are the differences in
Assessment Outcomes between portfolios and standard testing practices.
Portfolio Testing
Represents the range of reading and Assesses students across a limited range
writing students are engaged in of reading and writing assignments
which may not match what students do
Engages students in assessing their Mechanically scored or scored by
progress and/or accomplishments and teachers who have little input
establishing ongoing learning goals
Measures each student’s achievement Assesses all students on the same
while allowing for individual differences dimension
between students
Represents a collaborative approach to Assessment process is not collaborative
assessment
Has a goal of student self-assessment Student assessment is not a goal
Addresses improvement, effort, and Addresses achievement only
achievement
Links assessment and teaching to Separates learning, testing, and teaching
learning
(Popham, 2011)
Portfolios contain relevant items from many different sources such as composition of
students in the form of essay, reports, stories; presentation such as observations
research investigation, and projects; narrative and anecdotal records; rating scales,
rubrics, self-reflection and checklists; visual arts such as photofolio, drawings,
paintings; performances as product, group work; and processes such as show-your
work problems, stages of writing a poem or a song.
As utilized in the classroom setting, portfolios have the same basic purpose and
principle to collect pieces of students’ performances or products that show
accomplishment or improvement overtime. These may be used depending on the
purposes and foci of the assessment to be measured. Thus, teachers should be guided
with the specific purposes in the process of collection.
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Why Use Portfolio?
Portfolios can be used for many purposes. The utilization of portfolio should be
identified before the collection of the work. Johnson and Johnson (2002) gave a
comprehensive discussion on the uses of portfolio, viz:
1. Portfolios give students the opportunity to direct their own learning. Students can:
With these, portfolios make the students as part of the assessment process by requiring
them to reflect and analyze their own work.
Basically, one big contribution of portfolio is to give the students the chance to reflect
and revisit on their performances overtime. Life in school is an on-going process of
submitting paper works, productions, and performances. Each day, students
experience a variety of school tasks which measure the different learner’s cognitive,
affective, and psychomotor domains. Thus, collecting the students’ works retain all
these experiences for subsequent reflection and analysis.
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Characteristics of Portfolio Assessment
Learning outcomes define what to include and how to utilize portfolio. There should
be a clear reason of what to include and how portfolio is to be utilized. Purposes and
targets must be constructively aligned to the teaching and learning activities and
assessment as well. Below illustrates an example of portfolio that reflects student
achievement in a particular subject area.
There should be a systematic and organized collection of the students’ work. Gathering
of pieces of work should make a sample of the student works and not as exhaustive
collection. In basic education, portfolio is being collected at the end of the quarter for
teacher’s assessment and evaluation.
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TOPIC 2: TYPES OF PORTFOLIO
There different types of portfolios you will encounter on assessing the performance
approach in your classroom. This is depending on the purpose and context of the
portfolio which are aligned to the learning competencies of the course of study. The
following are the emerging types of portfolio used in the teacher and learning
assessment.
I. Showcase Portfolio. This shows the best of the students’ best work. This type of
portfolio is based on the students’ personal criteria rather than the criteria of their
teacher. Students select their best work and reflect thoughtfully on its quality. This also
shows the uniqueness of students’ work that individual profiles emerge. Stiggins (2007)
described this portfolio as celebration portfolios and contends that this type of
portfolio encourages self-reflection and self-evaluation, but makes scoring more
difficult and time consuming because the unique structure and content of each
portfolio.
III. Process Portfolio. This shows the steps and/or the results of a completed project
or task as the primary goal of this portfolio. This is very useful because the final product
does not always show the skills and knowledge that the student used in an effort to
complete the project. By asking students to provide evidence of their work along the
way, teachers can see both strengths and weaknesses in the thinking process and the
skills students used (Musial, 2009).
IV. Product Portfolio. The product portfolio is similar to the process portfolio except
that its focus is on the end product rather than on the process in which the product
was developed. In this type of portfolio, there is a little or no information about the
steps that was used in crafting the product. On the other hand, this type of portfolio
contains the final product as well as detailed explanations of each part of the final
product.
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TOPIC 3: ELEMENTS OF PORTFOLIO
The contents of portfolio may be determined by the students who decide what include
in their portfolio; the cooperative learning group, their classmates who can
recommend what to include in the portfolio; and the teacher, school or the division
who can specify work samples and components to be included in the portfolio, it could
be an essay or photographs and other documents which strengthen the students’
learning outcomes. Illustrated below is an example of the best works portfolio in the
different field of studies.
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But generally, portfolio has its distinct elements which are expected and included from
the outputs of the students, viz:
I. Cover Sheet. This creatively includes the nature of the student’s (or group’s) work
and could be in a form of a letter. It also reflects the progress of the learners as it
summarizes the evidence of student’s learning and progress. The table below shows a
sample portfolio cover sheet.
FINAL PORTFOLIO
Name/Group:_________________________ Date:____________
Subject/Course:_______________________
Purpose:___________________________________________________________
Recommendations:
II. Table of contents. This includes the title of each work sample and its page number.
III. Work samples. These are entries which are to be included in the portfolio which
can be categorized as core (samples which are needed to be included), and optional
(students preference on what to include). The core are the basic elements required
for each students and serves as basis for decision in assessing the student’s work. On
the other hand, the optional entries allow the folder to represent creativity and
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uniqueness of each student. In the introduction of the work samples, it is a must to
include the rationale, explaining what work samples are included, why each one is
significant, and how they all fit together in a holistic view of the student’s (or group’s)
work.
IV. Dates of all sample works to facilitate evidence of growth over time.
V. Drafts of the written products, or even the seminal attempts in writing the write ups
for the portfolio and the revised version based on the corrected versions.
VI. Self-assessment. This is written by the student or the group members which could
be in terms of self-reflection and analysis or a form of insights. Teacher may include
questions which can facilitate the assessment of the students.
VII. Future goals. This is based on the student’s (or group’s) current achievements,
interests, and progress.
VIII. Other’s comments and assessments. This may came from the teacher,
cooperative learning groups, and other interested parties such as the parents.
Designing a portfolio assessment requires some advance and careful planning. It begins
with a clear idea about the purpose of the assessment. The following steps provide a
general directions for developing portfolio assessment.
The design and use of portfolio begins with a clear description of your purpose and
focus. The questions, “Why do I want a portfolio?” and “What learning targets and
curriculum goals will it serve?” sharpen the focus of identifying the purpose and focus
of portfolio. With these, you can clearly identify why you want your students to create
a portfolio. Below are list of questions on how to prepare and use portfolio.
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3. What are the purposes and objectives of the portfolio?
a. ________________________________________________________________
b. ________________________________________________________________
c. ________________________________________________________________
6. Who will develop the rubrics to assess and evaluate the portfolios?
(Johnson, 2002)
Portfolios may be used to assess understanding but are ideal for assessing product,
skill, and reasoning targets. This is especially true for multi-dimensional skills such as
writing, reading, and problem solving that are continually improved and demonstrated
through products. With extensive self-reflection, critical thinking is an important target.
Students also develop metacognitive and decision-making skills. As with other
performance assessments, portfolios generally are not very efficient for assessing
knowledge targets (McMillan, 2007).
It is important to distinguish between learning targets for individual work samples and
the content of the portfolio as a whole. The targets that reflect all content tends to be
broader and more general, such as “development as a reader,” “adapts writing to
audience,” “speaks clearly,” and “adapts writing style to different purposes.”
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Reading Skills Performance
Results of search,
as part of project
(+comment card)
From Kemp and Toperoff (1998)
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II. Identify the Physical Structure
Once the purpose and targets have been clarified, we need to think of the physical
structure of the portfolio. Some practical questions affect the successful use of
portfolio in your classrooms:
If students cannot mange and access their materials affectively, they will become
discouraged. You may need your original intentions based on the answer to practical
considerations. Choices of products and work outputs influence students on what to
include in their portfolio.
The content of portfolio consists of entries (student products and activity records)
which provides assessment information about the content and processes identified in
the dimensions to be assessed. These naturally are artifacts which are derived from the
different learning activities. The range of samples is extensive and must be determined
to some extent by the subject matter and the instruction as present in the table below.
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arts, webs, charts,
timelines, murals
Audiotape of Problem made up Drawing to scale Drawings of
readings by student to artifacts
display a concept
Adapted from Musial (2009)
Select the organizational entries of portfolio that will allow the students to meet the
purpose of portfolio. If your target is to show performance product, select output
oriented tasks. If you need to provide feedback to students on the procedures they use
in putting together a report, include a summary of that process as part of the portfolio.
McMillan (2007) pointed out to use work samples that capitalize on the advantages of
portfolios, such as flexibility, individuality, and authenticity.
The categories or type of entries should consider the content and process dimension it
will assess and the minimum and maximum number of entries per category. Make sure
that entries should fully represent the students’ attainment or growth and learning
progress. This allows variation so that students can show individual work. This often
means giving students choices and potentials about what they want to include in their
portfolio entries.
It is best also to determine the types of work samples to be included in the portfolio at
the same time that instructional activities are developed. Products and performances
that result from instructional activities often provide useful work samples in portfolios.
Below are examples of questions which are helpful in determining student reflections.
These questions help the students gain metacognitive skills including self-reflection
and assessment.
• Describe the steps that you used to complete today’s activity. Which steps
really helped you complete the activity and which ones were less useful?
What would you change next time?
• What personal strengths did you notice in completing today’s work? What
difficulties did you have and how did you overcome them? What kind of help
did you need that you could not get? Where might you find that help in the
future?
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• What aspect of today’s work was meaningful to you? What effect did the
work have in your own attitudes, perspectives, or interests?
• What weaknesses did you find in your efforts to complete your work? How
might you overcome one of these weaknesses? What resources would you
like to use that are not available to you?
(Musial, 2009)
After determining the student reflection guidelines, the next step is to establish the
scoring criteria you will use in evaluating student performance. By working on the
student criteria, students will develop greater ownership of the process and will have
experience in working cooperatively and collaboratively with you as a teacher.
However, as the facilitator of learning, you are responsible to ensure the reliability and
high quality of scoring criteria. The students should be informed also on how you will
evaluate their portfolios. This can be done by sharing the scoring criteria with your
students so that they can ask questions, give their suggestions and insights. The table
below shows example of Math portfolio under the content of Problem Solving.
Content Categories
3. What do you like best about how you solved in this problem?
___________________________________________________________________
4. How will you improve your problem-solving skills on the next problem?
___________________________________________________________________
To be completed by teacher:
1. Quality of Reflection
Rating Description
5 Has excellent insight into his/her problem-solving abilities and some ideas
of how to get better
4 Has good insight into his/her problem-solving abilities and some ideas of
how to get better
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3 Reflects somewhat on problem-solving strengths and needs. Has some
idea of how to improve as a problem solver
2 Seldom reflects on problem-solving strengths and needs. Has little idea of
how to improve as a problem solver.
1 Has no concept of himself or herself as a problem solver.
2. Mathematical Knowledge
Rating Description
5 Shows deep understanding of problems, math concepts, and principles.
Uses appropriate math terms and all calculations are correct.
4 Shows good understanding of problems, math concepts, and principles.
Uses appropriate math terms most of the time. Few computational errors.
3 Shows understanding of some of the problems, math concepts, and
principles. Uses some terms correctly. Contains some computation errors.
2 Errors in the use of many problems. Many terms used incorrectly
1 Major errors in problems. Shows no understanding of math problems,
concepts and principles.
3. Strategic Knowledge
Rating Description
5 Identifies all the important elements of the problem. Reflects an
appropriate and systematic strategy for solving the problem; gives clear
evidence of a solution.
4 Identifies most of the important elements of the problem. Reflects an
appropriate and systematic strategy for solving the problem; gives clear
evidence of a solution most of the time.
3 Identifies some important elements of the problem. Gives some evidence
of a strategy to solve the problems but process is incomplete.
2 Identifies few important elements of the problem. Gives little evidence
of a strategy to solve the problems and the process is unknown.
1 Uses irrelevant outside information. Copies parts of the problem; no
attempt at solution.
4. Communication
Rating Description
5 Gives a complete response with clear, unambiguous explanation; includes
diagrams and charts when they help clarify explanation; presents strong
arguments that are logically developed.
4 Gives good response with fairly clear explanation, which includes some use
of diagrams and charts; presents good arguments that are mostly but not
always logically developed.
3 Explanations and descriptions of problem solution are somewhat clear but
incomplete; make use of diagrams and examples to clarify points but
arguments are incomplete.
2 Explanations and descriptions of problems are weak; makes little, if any,
use of diagrams and examples to clarify points; arguments are seriously
flawed.
1 Ineffective communication; diagrams misinterpret the problem;
arguments have no sound premise
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Sum of ratings:_______________
Average of ratings:____________
Comments: _________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________
In evaluating scoring criteria, the rubrics available must be consistent with the purpose
of the portfolio and with the overall curriculum framework. Reliability must be
considered as well, to give the same results for the same students when applied by
different teachers.
• Are students knowledgeable about what a portfolio is and how it will be used?
• Do students know why portfolios are important?
• Are the students responsible for or involved in selecting the content?
• Is there a sufficient number of work samples but not too many?
• Is a table of contents included
• Are specific self-evaluation questions provided?
• Is the checklist of contents complete?
• Are scoring criteria for individualized teacher-written comments provided?
• Are student-teacher conferences included?
(McMillan, 2007)
Portfolio Evaluation
I. Student Evaluation
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opportunity for students to become better achievers as they learn to reflect on their
strengths and weaknesses.
Teacher as a model should be the first person to demonstrate the skills in evaluating
and critiquing portfolio. Once the students understand the process and the principle of
evaluating, they can start to engage with their own reflection and establish a
comfortable, confident and reliable analysis and critique of their own work.
Some questions can be asked to facilitate student self-reflection for individual work
which give insights into how students have been reaching the learning targets:
Evaluating a portfolio involves making judgments about students’ outputs. The teacher
can use numerical scores to summarize judgment or qualitative system. Scoring needs
to be reliable and should not be affected by inconsistencies not related to the qualities
being judged.
In most of the classroom situations, the teacher is both the observer and the rater. If
there are some important instructional decisions to be made, additional raters must be
considered in order to make scoring more fair.
McMillan (2007) pointed out that students need to compare their reflections with your
evaluations and make plans fur subsequent work. Although weaknesses and areas for
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improvement need to be covered, emphasize students’ progress and achievement as
well.
One way or another, this also provides an excellent means of communicating with
parents. The work outputs and reflections of the students can be a sort of window into
what is happening withing the classroom as parents see the different aspects of their
children’s experiences in the school. As a tripartite communication between the
parents, teachers, and students, portfolio assessment provides framework for
meaningful three-way discussion of the progress, achievement, and limitations.
After the portfolios are complete, it is a good idea to have an exhibition of portfolios
and/or student-led parent-teacher conferences, in which students present their
portfolios to their parents.
Below is a checklist which can help you design and enhance your portfolio assessment
program.
1. What purpose(s) will your portfolio serve? (Check any that apply.)
Prepare a sample of best work for future teachers to see
Communicate to parents what has been learned
Evaluate my teaching
Assign course grades
Create collections of favorite or best work
Document achievement for alternative credit
Submission to a college or employer
To show growth in skills and dispositions
Others: ________________________________________
Flexibility
Persistence
Collaboration
Acceptance of feedback
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Others (specify) __________________________________________
4. What criteria or rubrics will you use to judge the extent to which these skills
positions were achieved?
_________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________
5. In rating the portfolio as a whole, what things will you look for?
Variety of entries
Growth in reflection
Growth in skill or performance
Organization
Presentation
6. What kind of scale will you construct to rate the overall portfolio?
_________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________
7. How will you combine all your ratings into final grade
_________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________
8. Who will be involved in the planning process?
Learners
Teachers
Parents
Yes
No
Learners
Teachers
Parents
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One
Two
More than two
Yes
No
14. Have you developed forms to rate and summarize ratings for all drafts and final
products?
15. What are your instructions on how work gets turned in and returned?
_________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________
16. Where will the portfolio be kept and who has access to them?
Where (specify) ______________________________
Who (specify) _______________________________
17. Who will plan, conduct, and attend the final conference?
Learners
Other teachers
Parents
Others (specify) ___________________________________
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