2. New generation of students…
• My computer is the nucleus of my workspace
• When I need information I go online
• Besides IM or email my cell phone is my primary method of
communication
• I’m usually juggling five things at once
• My attention span is very small
• I want instant gratification
• I get bored very easily Oblinger 2008
3.
4.
5. Harold Rheingold
• Five fundamental digital
literacies, online skills:
– attention,
– participation,
– collaboration,
– critical consumption of
information (or "crap
detection"),
– and network smarts
9. Established
• Paper based portfolio
practice
• Collection of evidence
• Individual work
• Feedback from tutor
10. outcomes
• Deepen student reflection
Intended
• Increase student engagement
• Address issues of diversity
in the classroom
• Develop digital literacies
11.
12.
13. Literature review
• DST facilitates the development
of a full range of digital
literacies, necessary for 21st
century graduates (Hull, 2003)
• as and when required, so that
they are using (and learning)
the tools to achieve a real
purpose rather than as skills
that can be checked off as
completed
(Olney, Herrington, &
Verenikina, 2009).
14.
15. • Social cohesion
• Critical reflection
• Motivation / student
Benefits
engagement
• Director’s chair - pride
• Authentic audience
• Transfer of academic
content into community
• Development of various
literacies
16. • Diverse literacy skills levels to
start with
Challenges
• Access to Technology
• Time
• Trusting students
• Adapting model to specific
discipline
• Process vs product
• Assessment
• Dissemination of stories
(access, copyright)
19. effective practice
• Thorough step by step planning
Key points for
• Involvement of inter-disciplinary team
with various skills
• Provision of access to infrastructure and
resources
• Scheduled time in computer lab
• Step by step guidance for students
(scaffolding)
• Student assistants/support (especially
when dealing with large classes)
• Use of software that is freely available
on the Web
• Virus management
• Research on practice / design based
model
• Trust students’ resourcefulness and
creativity!
20. Any questions?
• www.cput.ac.za/blogs/edutech
• http://www.cput.ac.za/blogs/edutech/digital-
storytelling-resources/
• YouTube channel:
http://www.youtube.com/user/CPUTstories
• gachagod@cput.ac.za or barnesv@cput.ac.za
23. ‘A digital collection of authentic and diverse evidence (e-portfolio) drawn
from a larger archive (PLE) that represents what a person has learned over
time, on which a person has reflected, designed for presentation to one or
more audiences for a particular rhetorical purpose’ (NLII, 2003)
Defining e-portfolios
25. ‘…it is argued that the real value of e-
Literature review
portfolios are not necessarily in the
showcasing of the product, but rather in
the process of learning and reflection
taking place in collecting evidence and
reflecting on experiences…’ (Barrett, 2011)
‘…e-portfolio practices require meta
cognitive skills of students since they are
required to ‘construct’ and
‘integrate’, combined with the expectation
of ‘making sense’ of their learning
(Dalton, 2007, p. 101)
26. • Development of own learning
goals
• Collaboration
Benefits
• Deeper levels of learning by
means of critical reflection
• Motivation / student
engagement / student-
centered
• Authentic audience
• Development of various
literacies
27. • Institutional control vs
student ownership
Challenges
• E-portfolio platform
• Diverse literacy skills
• Expected support
• Process vs product
• Student motivation /
incentives