This versatile and practical book helps pre- and in-service teachers create teaching portfolios to be used effectively
in interviews and throughout their teaching careers.
Portfolio development serves as a fair, authentic, broad-based, and impartial means of teacher assessment. The
growing emphasis on creating and maintaining professional teaching portfolios enables pre-service and in-service
teachers to play a more active role in charting their own professional growth and then demonstrating their competence
and achievements. This manual provides clear, manageable, step-by-step guidelines and tips for professional portfolio
development that can be followed by teachers at all stages of their careers.
Features
Provides specific guidelines for assembling portfolios, step-by-step procedures for portfolio development,
and tips on how to organize a portfolio to document achievement of professional goals (Ch. 2).
Offers explanations of national teaching standards that form the organizing system of the portfolio; scenarios
of actual pre-service teaching activities that illuminate the standards (Ch. 4).
An extensive, annotated list of artifact possibilities helps students identify papers, projects, course assignments,
etc. that can be used to document professional growth and competence (Ch. 5).
Chapter 4 instructs readers how to use a portfolio at three points in a professional career--as a professional
growth tool for the pre-service teacher, as a job interview tool for the beginning teacher, and for continuing
education and professionalism for the veteran teacher.
Pre-service teachers learn how to use working portfolios while completing teacher preparation programs, then
how to use presentation portfolios in teacher interviews. Includes specific interview questions and suggested responses,
using the portfolio as a guide (Ch. 5).
In-service teachers learn how maintaining portfolios affects professional growth and ways of using portfolios
to accomplish goals in classrooms and school districts (Ch. 5).
In Appendix C, a sample brochure called "Portfolio At-a-Glance," illustrates how to summarize the
contents of a portfolio to make it more understandable to a reviewer.
Appendix D provides a glossary of terms important to portfolio development.
New To This Edition
Entirely new chapter on creating and developing electronic portfolios (Ch. 3).
Content has been thoroughly updated in each chapter.
Table of Contents
Preface.
Acknowledgments.
1. What You Need to Know About Portfolios.
Why Portfolios?
What Is a Portfolio?
How Do I Organize My Portfolio?
What Evidence Should I Include in My Portfolio?
Who Is the Audience for My Portfolio?
How Might I Use My Portfolio?
2. Guidelines for Assembling Your Portfolio.
How to Use This Chapter.
Creating the Working Portfolio.
Creating the Presentation Portfolio.
3. Electronic Portfolios.
Definition of Electronic Portfolios.
Benefits of Electronic Portfolios.
Creation of Electronic Portfolios.
Stages for Developing Electronic Portfolios.
4. Organization of Portfolios Around Teaching Standards.
How to Use This Chapter.
How This Chapter Is Organized.
Knowledge of the Subject Matter.
Knowledge of Human Development and Learning.
Adapting Instruction for Individual Needs.
Multiple Instructional Strategies.
Classroom Motivation and Management Skills.
Communication Skills.
Instructional Planning Skills.
Assessment of Student Learning.
Professional Commitment and Responsibility.
Partnerships.
5. Using the Portfolio Throughout a Teaching Career.
The Full Potential of Portfolios.
Using the Portfolio While in a Teacher Education Program.
Using the Portfolio When Interviewing for a Teaching Position.
Using the Portfolio During Inservice Teaching.
6. Artifact Possibilities.
How to Use This Chapter.
Types of Artifacts.
Appendices.
Appendix A: Professional Organizations-NCATE Affiliated.
Appendix B: Artifact Checklist.
Appendix C: Developing Your "Portfolio at a Glance."
Appendix D: Glossary.