ePortfolio use by university students in Australia : Developing a sustainable community of practice


Autoria(s): Hallam, Gillian C.; Harper, Wendy E.; Hauville, Kim L.; Creagh, Tracy A.; McAllister, Lynn M.
Data(s)

01/12/2009

Resumo

This report documents Stage Two of the Australian ePortfolio Project (AeP2), to specifically explore the current scope of national and international ePortfolio communities of practice in order to identify the factors that have contributed to their success and sustainability. The study has built on Stage One of the Australian ePortfolio Project (Hallam, Harper, McCowan, Hauville, McAllister, & Creagh, 2008), which outlined the broad range of issues and challenges, as well as significant opportunities, that faced the higher education sector in terms of ePortfolio practice, to determine how the emergent community of ePortfolio researchers and practitioners in Australia might be advanced. ---------- The overarching aims of this project were to focus on building the Australian community of practice through an online forum and further symposium activities. Through the research activities the project sought to generate the following major outcomes: develop a forum within the ALTC Exchange to support an ePortfolio community of practice; develop strategies to encourage interest in and engagement with community of practice activities; develop and promote resources to support the diverse stakeholders in ePortfolio practice; collaborate in the establishment of a cross-sector ePortfolio community of practice; host a second Australian ePortfolio Symposium (AeP2) to disseminate the findings from the Australian ePortfolio Project, to explore innovative practice in ePortfolio use in higher education, to articulate policy developments, and to stimulate discussion on international ePortfolio issues; host an associated trade display as a forum for strengthening the higher education sector’s understanding of the features and functionality of ePortfolio platforms; develop resources to support an ePortfolio symposium model that may be adopted for future events. ----------- The project activities encompassed a survey of stakeholders, a program of semi-structured interviews with community managers and a series of case studies depicting successful ePortfolio communities. The survey of ePortfolio practitioners sought to determine the potential value of an ePortfolio CoP, the preferred focus for and the desired features of such a community, as well as the options for the technical and social architecture of an online forum. Through the semi-structured interviews it was possible to examine current examples of CoP activity, to identify the critical success factors and the challenges faced by individual ePortfolio CoPs, so that the attributes of good practice could be presented. The data collected in the interviews contributed to the development of 14 case studies, which have been beneficial in illustrating the diverse nature of CoPs in Australia and overseas.----------- The report presents a rich picture of national and international ePortfolio communities of practice, with an examination of the factors that have contributed to their success and sustainability.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/31915/

Publicador

Queensland University of Technology, Department of Teaching and Learning Services

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/31915/1/AeP2_Report_ebook.pdf

http://www.eportfoliopractice.qut.edu.au/

Hallam, Gillian C., Harper, Wendy E., Hauville, Kim L., Creagh, Tracy A., & McAllister, Lynn M. (2009) ePortfolio use by university students in Australia : Developing a sustainable community of practice. Australian ePortfolio Project, Stage 2. Queensland University of Technology, Department of Teaching and Learning Services, Brisbane.

Direitos

Copyright 2009 The Authors & Queensland University of Technology

Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Australia Licence

Fonte

Division of Technology, Information and Learning Support

Palavras-Chave #130306 Educational Technology and Computing #Communities of practice #Educational technology #ePortfolios #HERN #Higher education
Tipo

Report