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Digital Portfolio 1 -STEPS AND EXAMPLES-

Digital portfolio 1 overview and examples

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Page 1: Digital portfolio 1  overview and examples

Digital Portfolio 1-STEPS AND EXAMPLES-

Page 2: Digital portfolio 1  overview and examples

Rubrics for the digital portfolio

1. Focus (25): The match of target audience and selection of artifacts.

2. Organization (25): Consistency and diversity of pages.

3. Style (25): Layout, design and color

4. Textual content (25): Introduction, bio, my story.

5. Multimedia content (25): Video and audio

6. Technical competency (25): Widgets and navigation

7. Interactivity (25): responsiveness with the audience

8. Creativity (25)

Page 3: Digital portfolio 1  overview and examples

What is a portfolio?

A portfolio is a goal-driven, organized collection of artefacts and reflections that demonstrate a growth or expansion of knowledge and skills over time.

The content, organization and presentation of materials in portfolios can vary greatly depending on the purpose and intended audience of the portfolio. An essential element of a portfolio is to show evidence of an individual’s growth and development.

So in your case, mostly being undergraduate students, you can also include future plans as content of your portfolio.

Digital portfolios, sometimes referred to as multimedia portfolios, electronic portfolios, e-folios and web folios contain much of the content traditional portfolios include but present these materials in digital format.

Page 4: Digital portfolio 1  overview and examples

Portfolio tells a story or stories

“The portfolio is a laboratory where students construct meaning from their accumulated experience." (Paulson & Paulson, 1994, p.5)

“A portfolio tells a story. It is the story of knowing. Knowing about things... Knowing oneself... Knowing an audience... Portfolios are students' own stories of what they know, why they believe they know it, and why others should be of the same opinion. A portfolio is opinion backed by fact... Students prove what they know with samples of their work.” (Paulson & Paulson, 1994, p.2)

Paulson, F.L. & Paulson, P. (1994) “Assessing Portfolios Using the Constructivist Paradigm” in Fogarty, R. (ed.) (1996) Student Portfolios. Palatine: IRI Skylight Training & Publishing.

Page 5: Digital portfolio 1  overview and examples

Link your story with portfolio, to do this….

1. Look-out for the parts of your story: Keep track of memories, reflections, anecdotes, images, audios, web links that you have.

2. Decide what story you want to tell in your portfolio is about. Try to summarize it in one sentence.

3. Decide your intended audience.

4. Get more artefacts. Video, audio and so forth.

5. Decide what you need and will create. Audio, Video and Audio-Video, Textual stories (bio, intro)

6. Think about the sections and name them.

7. Order them and arrange them.

Page 6: Digital portfolio 1  overview and examples

Tips for branding yourself through digital portfolio.

Brand storyteller

http://www.branddrivendigital.com/8-tips-to-being-a-better-brand-storyteller/

Guideline

http://www.fastcompany.com/3039464/how-i-get-it-done/the-authentic-persons-guide-to-self-branding?utm_source

Tips

http://www.branddrivendigital.com/personal-branding-tips/

Page 7: Digital portfolio 1  overview and examples

Step by step

A portfolio is not an autobiography. Do not include your entire life history. Show only your best work and provide relevant examples. Organize your content into separate sections.

1. Ask yourself questions. What is this for? What content do you have? What type of website do you like?

2. Site map.

3. Decide text content: titles, navigation, bio, resume, stories, and others.

4. Decide images: Photo, video, logo, graphic

5. List the content for each page

6. Draw draft

7. Write content

8. Design and create graphics (logo)

Page 8: Digital portfolio 1  overview and examples

Examples of purposes

Most digital portfolios are for employers or school admissions. But there are other purposes too. A website may be multi-purposed. Providing an introduction to your organization with a digital brochure website Supporting your sales-related efforts with product information, white papers or a

shopping cart Disseminating information to your constituents Educate youths in specialized areas Taking donations / selling merchandise Promoting your events / activities Getting feedback. E.g., find hobby-mates.

Page 9: Digital portfolio 1  overview and examples

Principle of COPE: Create once, publish everywhere (COPE)

As the title suggests, you create the content once, and you use it for your website, your blog, your mobile application or device friendly website, for your pitches, your proposals, your in-person sales, in conversations with others.

You have consistency in all channels, and will never have to start from scratch. The original content should be flexible for other platforms. New devices need

new rules, but not new content.

Page 10: Digital portfolio 1  overview and examples

Video clips for sense of purpose..

Why make a portfolio? (PR or Journalism job)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zjdWjNU0nZ0

Why make a portfolio? (advertising job)

http://www.mediabistro.com/How-to-Get-an-Advertising-Job-576-ondemandvideo.html

Page 11: Digital portfolio 1  overview and examples

Pages: Home

As the front door to your website, your homepage should be an inviting place. It needs to clearly convey what the site is and entice users to read more.

Pitch to audience: Short paragraph(s). Overall statement about the website and you. Your passions, skills, major, and/or experience that would be relevant to your audience.

You may add useful information. E.g., how to navigate the page. “You can find my resume and recent work at….”

Images: Photo, video, or blog (we will learn how to embed tumbler or storify in Muse later). Try to avoid your profile picture. Your activity or symbolic photo are better.

Logo

Page 12: Digital portfolio 1  overview and examples

About Me

Bio: Be creative and bold. Show what you have to offer

Examples of information included in 1. Where you're from

2. School

3. Major/Minor

4. Relevant experience and briefly what you did

5. Relevant involvements on/off campus

6. Any other information you feel it is important for employers to know about you

Photo of you

Page 13: Digital portfolio 1  overview and examples

My Work (My Stories)

Your work samples provide evidence of your skills, knowledge, experience, and uniqueness. “The primary reason anyone will visit your website is to see your work, so give them enough to look at”

Photo slideshow, Audio, Video are musts.

Think about what else can be included here.

e.g., projects (from other classes or high school), written articles, presentations…

Do not organize chronologically, but by themes.

Page 14: Digital portfolio 1  overview and examples

Resume

Include a PDF version of your resume Adjust your resume to fit the particular portfolio theme your are developing *Tips for writing resume on Blackboard.

Page 15: Digital portfolio 1  overview and examples

Contact and other pages

Form and Map (use Muse Widgets).

Other page ideas: Testimonials (Friend, Professor, Coach..), Skills, or Educational information (How to …)

Page 16: Digital portfolio 1  overview and examples

Content driven Original title and texts Animation

Page 17: Digital portfolio 1  overview and examples

Simple and visual Concentrated on the front page

Page 18: Digital portfolio 1  overview and examples

Full background slide show on the front page (Muse can do this)

Minimalism design on the rest.

Page 19: Digital portfolio 1  overview and examples

A typical portfolio of photographer Heavy emphasis on works.

Page 20: Digital portfolio 1  overview and examples

Student example

Do not, if you can help it, put your own portfolio picture at the front.

This is like a textbook model.

Sort of boring. But look at her portfolio.

She has 10 subpages. It is persuasive.