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Assessing learning outcomes in school with e-portfolio

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Using social media for portfolio-based assessment of learning outcomes in informatics Mart Laanpere, Kairi Ainjärv Tallinn University, Estonia
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Page 1: Assessing learning outcomes in school with e-portfolio

Using social media for portfolio-based assessment of learning outcomes in informatics

Mart Laanpere, Kairi AinjärvTallinn University, Estonia

Page 2: Assessing learning outcomes in school with e-portfolio

The status of informatics in the national curriculum in Estonia1986: programming as “the second

literacy” (plenum of Communist Party)

1996: the first national curriculum, informatics as an elective subject and ICT as a cross-curricular theme

2002: new national curriculum, cross –curricular theme ‘ICT and media’

2002-2005: national tests of ICT literacy for 9th grade

Page 3: Assessing learning outcomes in school with e-portfolio

The “new informatics” 2011 New national curriculum 2011:

informatics as an elective subjectGrade 6: learning with computersGrade 9: information society

technologiesGrade 10: using computers for inquiryGrade 11: basics of programmingCompulsory: portfolio-based assessment

of learning outcomes in informaticsCross-curricular theme ‘Technology &

Innovation’, project-based learning

Page 4: Assessing learning outcomes in school with e-portfolio

Expected learning outcomes (G6)Navigates in user interfacePublishes documents in various

formatsFinds and re-uses Web contentStores, copies and archives the

files Creates presentationsRepresents data using tables and

diagramsIs aware of health-related threatsProtects her online privacy and

identity

Page 5: Assessing learning outcomes in school with e-portfolio

E-portfolioA portfolio is a collection of work that

a learner has collected, selected, organized, reflected upon, and presented to show understanding and growth over time. Additionally, a critical component of a portfolio is the combination of a learner's reflection on the individual pieces of work (often called artifacts), as well as an overall reflection on the story that the portfolio tells. (Barrett, 2006)

Page 6: Assessing learning outcomes in school with e-portfolio

Portfolio softwarePortfolio modules within Learning

Management Systems (e.g ANGEL, Moodle): closed, expensive, complex

Portfolio systems (e.g. Mahara, Elgg): server hosting issue

DIY Personal Learning Environment with social media: blog (Wordpress.com, blogspot.com), wiki, MySpace, Google

Page 7: Assessing learning outcomes in school with e-portfolio

Research questionsWhat are the advantages and disadvantages

of e-portfolio as a method and tool for assessing the learning outcomes in basic school informatics course?

What are the suitable evaluation criteria and procedures for informatics-related e-portfolios based on social media?

What are advantages of Elgg vs self-selected social media tools as the basis for creating learner portfolios?

How should Elgg be adapted in case one plans to use it as a platform for building e-portfolios in school settings?

Page 8: Assessing learning outcomes in school with e-portfolio

Method and sampleComparative action research in

two rural schools: concept, platform, pilot course, assessment of learning outcomes

Kairi works as informatics teacher in both

Two groups of 8th grade students: 14 + 25

One group was allowed to select their own tool for creating e-portfolio, the other group was using Elgg

4 weeks testing period

Page 9: Assessing learning outcomes in school with e-portfolio

ResultsApproximately similar amount

and frequency of posts/evidences in portfolios

No differences between boys and girls

Self-selected: blog (6), Google Sites (3), rate.ee (3), box.net (2)

Elgg: 230 posts (most done in lessons), 26 completed portfolios (out of 34)

Elgg users needed significantly more help/scaffolding in the beginning

Page 10: Assessing learning outcomes in school with e-portfolio

ResultsPeer assessment of portfolios

based on rubric developed by teacher:

Page 11: Assessing learning outcomes in school with e-portfolio

ConclusionsIf Elgg or Mahara hosting is an

issue for school, DIY social media portfolios are a viable solution

Assessment rubric helps to assess portfolios

Elgg needs adaptations: a separate portfolio page, learning outcomes as categories that can be added to postings and files, summary page for teacher


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