Digital Storytelling Archives | bulb https://my.bulbapp.com/category/digital-storytelling/ Digital Portfolios Fri, 09 May 2025 18:31:14 +0000 en hourly 1 https://my.bulbapp.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/cropped-favicon-32x32.png Digital Storytelling Archives | bulb https://my.bulbapp.com/category/digital-storytelling/ 32 32 231045334 Using bulb for Language Classes https://my.bulbapp.com/melissa-vasquez-cast-tech/ https://my.bulbapp.com/melissa-vasquez-cast-tech/#respond Fri, 07 Aug 2020 18:01:00 +0000 https://my.bulbapp.com/college-and-career-readiness/jason-salazar-cast-tech-copy/ Using bulb for Language Classes See how Melissa uses bulb Digital Portfolios with her English language students, documenting progress over time & showcasing their work. With bulb, Melissa… gives her students a platform to organize their work in a digital way, keeping things streamlined & paperless has her students document their learning in each unit has a […]

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Using bulb for Language Classes

See how Melissa uses bulb Digital Portfolios with her English language students, documenting progress over time & showcasing their work.

With bulb, Melissa…

  • gives her students a platform to organize their work in a digital way, keeping things streamlined & paperless
  • has her students document their learning in each unit
  • has a way to show that her students are more than a test score or a grade
  • provides a way for students to show their skills to potential employers
  • personalizes work with photos, videos, audio & text
  • collects artifacts of learning for each of her students throughout the year
  • gives her students a voice & choice in how they display their writing in their digital portfolio
  • tracks student growth over time

bulb is the perfect platform for teachers to enhance their langue learning classroom experience.

Photo by Mimi Thian on Unsplash.

Using bulb for Language Classes

 

See how Melissa uses bulb Digital Portfolios with her English language students, documenting progress over time & showcasing their work.

With bulb, Melissa…

  • gives her students a platform to organize their work in a digital way, keeping things streamlined & paperless
  • has her students document their learning in each unit
  • has a way to show that her students are more than a test score or a grade
  • provides a way for students to show their skills to potential employers
  • personalizes work with photos, videos, audio & text
  • collects artifacts of learning for each of her students throughout the year
  • gives her students a voice & choice in how they display their writing in their digital portfolio
  • tracks student growth over time

Want to learn more about how you can use bulb for yourself and for your students?

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A High School Student Tells His Story & Showcases Projects with bulb https://my.bulbapp.com/noah-wong-cast-tech/ https://my.bulbapp.com/noah-wong-cast-tech/#respond Fri, 07 Aug 2020 17:08:37 +0000 https://my.bulbapp.com/personalized-learning/tara-bordeaux-copy-2/ A high school Student Tells His Story & Showcases Projects with bulb. Hear how High School student Noah is using his bulb Digital Portfolio to showcase his best work, store his projects, and tell his story. With bulb, Noah… builds his resume in a unique way, showing in detail who he is & his skills easily […]

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A high school Student Tells His Story & Showcases Projects with bulb.

Hear how High School student Noah is using his bulb Digital Portfolio to showcase his best work, store his projects, and tell his story.

With bulb, Noah…

  • builds his resume in a unique way, showing in detail who he is & his skills
  • easily shares his projects with teachers, peers, family & potential employers
  • documents a project’s process; what he’s learned throughout the process, not solely the final outcome
  • showcases work for teachers, highlighting what he’s struggled with, how he overcame, & what he learned
  • shows who he is by adding audio & visuals to each page to reflect his personality
  • reflects on his growth & progress over time

bulb is the perfect platform for teachers to tell their stories and showcase their projects. Every student deserves the opportunity to share their unique voice and talents with the world, and bulb is the platform to make that happen.

A High School Student Tells His Story & Showcases Projects with bulb

Hear how Noah is using his bulb Digital Portfolio to showcase his best work, store his projects, and tell his story.

With bulb, Noah…

  • builds his resume in a unique way, showing in detail who he is & his skills
  • easily shares his projects with teachers, peers, family & potential employers
  • documents a project’s process; what he’s learned throughout the process, not solely the final outcome
  • showcases work for teachers, highlighting what he’s struggled with, how he overcame, & what he learned
  • shows who he is by adding audio & visuals to each page to reflect his personality
  • reflects on his growth & progress over time

Want to learn more about how you can use bulb for yourself and for your students?

bulb Home

bulb for K-12

bulb for Higher Ed

Would you to create your own bulb account?

Sign-up

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The ePortfolio Challenge: bulb x Miami-Dade Schools https://my.bulbapp.com/miami-dade-success-story/ https://my.bulbapp.com/miami-dade-success-story/#respond Tue, 04 Aug 2020 18:28:01 +0000 https://my.bulbapp.com/?p=19793 Photo by Lance Asper on Unsplash. The ePortfolio Challenge: bulb x Miami-Dade Schools  The 4th largest school district in the U.S, Miami-Dade County Public Schools, excites students and teachers to use ePortfolios by hosting a high energy event around CTE, STEM and STEAM. Miami-Dade County Public Schools (M-DCPS) is the 4th largest school district in […]

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Photo by Lance Asper on Unsplash.

The ePortfolio Challenge: bulb x Miami-Dade Schools

 
The 4th largest school district in the U.S, Miami-Dade County Public Schools, excites students and teachers to use ePortfolios by hosting a high energy event around CTE, STEM and STEAM.

Miami-Dade County Public Schools (M-DCPS) is the 4th largest school district in the U.S. The district holds 392 schools—133 of them have made it to the list of 2020 Best High Schools, according to the U.S News & World Report. In addition, four of their high schools are among the top 100 in the nation, and nine of their high schools are in the top 20 for Florida. Often recognized as a leader in education, the district continues to grow by innovating ways to intrigue students and encourage their learning.

In 2018, the Dade School CTE Program at Turner Tech first started using bulb and then expanded to all NAF students across their network. At first, they used the platform in simple, small ways to achieve short-term goals. Over time, they started applying the digital portfolio for other reasons and expanded its use around the district, eventually encouraging all students to use it. They wondered – what would be the most captivating and exciting way to motivate students to create and maintain their own digital portfolio? Thus, they added a ePortfolio Challenge to their already successful annual Innov@ate Challenge. This challenge, along with Miami-Dade’s use of the digital portfolios over time, has gotten students and teachers excited about the possibilities of using the tool.

Miami-Dade Innov@te Challenge

Miami-Dade Innov@te Challenge is one of the teachers’ and students’ favorite days. The annual competition grows every year with more participants, attendees, educators, mentors, scholarships, guest speakers, and more. The energy is electric at this event. Students can walk around and network, they can participate in any of the STEM and STEAM challenges, and they can get creative in their own way within any category.

At the Innov@te Challenge in December 2019, there were 22 challenges (see here), including the ePortfolio competition. Students were asked to create a bulb digital portfolio to tell their story in front of a panel of judges.

One of the judges for the eportfolio competition was Keynote speaker, Justin Shaifer, also known as Mr. Fascinate. His mission is to inspire under-represented kids to pursue STEM and STEAM careers. Justin’s latest venture is the “Magic Cool Bus”, a mobile STEM exhibit that excites kids in the New York City area. Learn more about this venture here.

ePortfolio Competition

Students who participated in the ePortfolio challenge were asked to build a portfolio to showcase their best work from their high school years. They were encouraged to include extracurricular activities, passion projects, talents and an About Me page. The goal: to create an ePortfolio to share when applying for internships, jobs, and to colleges. After presenting their portfolios, the five judges then presented feedback to the students as if they were potential employers.

The students were judged on three main categories:

  1. Ability to showcase their personality and tell their full story using their digital portfolio.
  2. Organization and appearance. The portfolio needed to be well organized, easily navigable, and visually appealing, all while showcasing the student’s personality.
  3. Quality of the content included in the portfolio. Students were encouraged to use audio, video, embed their work, and use pictures to show what they know and who they are.

When asked about why the students chose to participate in this challenge over the other categories, here’s what a few participants said:

“Making something that’s personal to me is really important because it helps me improve myself when I’m looking at different parts of me.” —Ciara | Miami Sunset Senior High School “Most people I’ve asked about the program say it seems wonderful – and that the portfolio really showcases me as a person.” —Sadre | William H. Turner Tech High School “The main reason I did this competition was to put myself out there and gain experience from it. it wasn’t about winning. I wanted to get feedback on my portfolio, to make it better to get a job or an interview.” —Berniya | William H. Turner Tech High School

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Giving Students a Creative Outlet To Share Their Story at Lanier Early College HS https://my.bulbapp.com/tara-bordeaux/ https://my.bulbapp.com/tara-bordeaux/#respond Tue, 04 Aug 2020 18:13:12 +0000 https://my.bulbapp.com/?p=19784 Using bulb as a creative outlet for students to tell their stories. Hear how Tara Bordeaux, Director of Cinematic & Media Arts at Lanier Early College High School, uses bulb Digital Portfolios in her classroom. With bulb, Tara’s students… easily share their schoolwork with the community, with their families, & with a larger audience have a […]

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Using bulb as a creative outlet for students to tell their stories.

Hear how Tara Bordeaux, Director of Cinematic & Media Arts at Lanier Early College High School, uses bulb Digital Portfolios in her classroom.

With bulb, Tara’s students…

  • easily share their schoolwork with the community, with their families, & with a larger audience
  • have a creative outlet
  • have the opportunity to share their voice
  • track their growth and assess their own skills
  • take ownership & pride in their work
  • show their capabilities beyond a piece of paper
  • engage with educators in interactive & visual ways

bulb is the perfect platform for teachers to enhance their classroom experience. Students can share their projects and cultivate a positive online presence to showcase who they are and what they can do. It’s quick to learn, easy to use, and allows you the freedom to share any kind of content online with whomever you’d like to see. Sign up for bulb and give your students a creative outlet to express themselves and capture all of their proudest work. Looking to purchase for a class, school, or district? Visit our pricing page and find a plan that’s right for you!

Giving Students a Creative Outlet To Share Their Story at Lanier Early College HS

Hear how Tara Bordeaux, Director of Cinematic & Media Arts at Lanier Early College High School, uses bulb Digital Portfolios in her classroom.

With bulb, Tara’s students…

  • easily share their schoolwork with the community, with their families, & with a larger audience
  • have a creative outlet
  • have the opportunity to share their voice
  • track their growth and assess their own skills
  • take ownership & pride in their work
  • show their capabilities beyond a piece of paper
  • engage with educators in interactive & visual ways

Want to learn more about how you can use bulb for yourself and for your students?

bulb Home

bulb for K-12

bulb for Higher Ed

Would you to create your own bulb account?

Sign-up

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3 Reasons Why Everyone Needs a Digital Portfolio https://my.bulbapp.com/3-reasons-why-everyone-needs-a-digital-portfolio/ https://my.bulbapp.com/3-reasons-why-everyone-needs-a-digital-portfolio/#respond Thu, 16 Jan 2020 14:39:31 +0000 https://my.bulbapp.com/3-reasons-why-everyone-needs-a-digital-portfolio/ 3 Reasons Why Everyone Needs a Digital Portfolio Gathering, creating and sharing content has become a part of everyday life in the digital era. New tools and platforms have gained popularity, specifically, the digital portfolio. Typically known for being a place for creatives to showcase their work, other industries are realizing the skills gained from […]

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3 Reasons Why Everyone Needs a Digital Portfolio

 

Gathering, creating and sharing content has become a part of everyday life in the digital era. New tools and platforms have gained popularity, specifically, the digital portfolio. Typically known for being a place for creatives to showcase their work, other industries are realizing the skills gained from creating a portfolio and the benefits. It allows anyone to collect information from thousands of apps and sources. The digital portfolio movement is gaining momentum as the new space to show what we’re learning and working on. Here are the top three reasons why everyone needs a digital portfolio.

1. Digital portfolios help develop soft skills.

According to OECD’s Future of Work, the two most important skills individuals can develop are soft skills and digital skills.

 

Why are these skills so important?
  • Soft skills – include communication, working in teams, leading, problem-solving, self-organizing and critical thinking.

 

In the workforce, “today’s employers are increasingly shifting towards skills-based hiring and promotion policies that reward individuals for their specific, demonstrated skills instead of signifiers of skills such as years of experience”, says CEO of Credly, Jonathan Finkelstein

soft skills

In education, measurement of student competency is changing. Standardized tests are becoming outdated, and educators are looking for more meaningful differentiators than test scores and GPAs. There’s been a shift to creating personalized learning plans, promoting individuality, and giving students the creative freedom to apply their skills and passions.

Digital portfolios help develop soft skills because they require people to articulate their experiences and present them in a way that is easily digestible to others. It gives individuals the opportunity to reflect on projects, goals and track growth over time. With a portfolio, it’s less about what school you attended or how many years of experience you have. A portfolio puts emphasis on how we think and what we can do.

2. Digital portfolios tell your story.

Portfolios have opened up ways to showcase potential. Using online resources and multimedia tools, we can tell our whole story with a digital portfolio.

Though a digital portfolio requires extra effort, creating one invites more career opportunities throughout your life. By keeping a digital portfolio throughout your career, you’re able to document your full professional story. Digital portfolio users have found it helpful to document (The Muse):

  • Interviews – Share thoughtful answers to frequently asked questions.
  • Performance reviews – Keep track of completed tasks, assemble projects and use multimedia to show work.
  • Promotions – Display accomplishments and document outcomes to prove work ethic.

So when it comes time to search for other opportunities, they have already captured their full story in a dynamic and beautiful way. Their job application will help them stand out above other applicants who only have a resume.

3. Digital portfolios encourage reflection.

With reflection comes growth. The practice of reflection is ideal and critical for those who want to expand learning. You’re able to address your mistakes and make room for improvements. You can also take a step back to brainstorm alternative solutions, helping you expand your understanding.

The Harvard Business Review describes reflection as giving “the brain an opportunity to pause amidst the chaos, untangle and sort through observations and experiences, consider multiple possible interpretations, and create meaning. This meaning becomes learning, which can then inform future mindsets and actions.”

Expanding the mind through reflection challenges it to take on greater tasks, which leads to other benefits. Reflection allows you to believe in your greater potential – as a result, it propels growth and brings you closer to your goals.

Examples of using digital portfolios for reflection:

  • Director of Secondary Social Studies, Dr. Montra Rogers from Houston Independent School District, uses digital portfolios to coach teachers. She encourages them to document specific events or to share insights from the classroom. They use portfolios to provide better feedback to one another, track their growth and to tell success stories to larger groups.
  • Creative and digital marketing leader of Prophet, Mat Zucker, and his team use digital portfolios to keep track of past work and to meet new objectives. “Portfolios curate your best stories to impress and convince the prospective client or employer that you are brilliant and can tackle things as in the past, but for them in the future,” says (Mat Zucker).

The skills gained from creating a digital portfolio benefits everyone, not just creatives. These are the skills today’s employers are looking for and the skills educators are teaching. Evidently, the global need for digital portfolios is being realized. More and more people are creating one to reveal these three benefits and almost always find that there are many more.

Explore the Resource Center for more helpful resources. Or contact us to set up a demo. 

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5 Ways Digital Portfolios Improve Reading & Writing https://my.bulbapp.com/5-ways-digital-portfolios-improve-reading-writing/ https://my.bulbapp.com/5-ways-digital-portfolios-improve-reading-writing/#respond Wed, 09 Oct 2019 16:07:13 +0000 https://my.bulbapp.com/5-ways-digital-portfolios-improve-reading-writing/ 5 Ways Digital Portfolios Improve Reading & Writing Here are five simple strategies to help students enjoy practicing and refining their reading, writing and literacy skills. 1. They invite expression and creativity. Your students have an array of tools for multimedia creation and application, successfully targeting all five components of ELA: listening, speaking, viewing, writing and […]

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5 Ways Digital Portfolios Improve Reading & Writing

Here are five simple strategies to help students enjoy practicing and refining their reading, writing and literacy skills.

 

1. They invite expression and creativity.

Your students have an array of tools for multimedia creation and application, successfully targeting all five components of ELA: listening, speaking, viewing, writing and reading. Help your students master these areas and develop a varied skill set for any curriculum.

2. They support all learning styles. 

Your students learn differently from one another. Digital portfolios make lessons resonate with all students and learning styles. Auditory learners can listen to instructions or pronunciations, visual learners can use videos or images, kinesthetic learners can document experiences or processes and reading/writing learners can further their skills.

3. They facilitate discussion and collaboration. 

Your students can collaborate, comment and gain perspective by viewing each other’s work in bulb. Spark engaging conversations around literature by hosting book reviews. Or give feedback during the writing process.

4. They can translate and share information in any language. 

Your students can share their smarts with the world. Translate a digital portfolio to any language for acquisition or to land an opportunity in a different country.

5. They encourage a lifetime of writing. 

Your students can express and discover themselves through a digital portfolio. Give your students a platform with no creative boundaries. Encourage your students to write about anything and collect work done for reflection and growth.

Explore the Resource Center for more helpful resources. Or contact us to set up a demo. 

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How to Use Digital Portfolios as a Travel Journal https://my.bulbapp.com/how-to-use-digital-portfolios-as-a-travel-journal/ https://my.bulbapp.com/how-to-use-digital-portfolios-as-a-travel-journal/#respond Tue, 18 Jun 2019 21:06:45 +0000 https://my.bulbapp.com/how-to-use-digital-portfolios-as-a-travel-journal/ How to Use Digital Portfolios as a Travel Journal It’s summertime! Chances are you’re reading this blog somewhere a bit more exotic than usual (and yeah, the couch totally counts). Whether you’re in the air, at the beach or on the go, your summer travel is experiential learning at work. Like students, we need to […]

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How to Use Digital Portfolios as a Travel Journal

 

It’s summertime! Chances are you’re reading this blog somewhere a bit more exotic than usual (and yeah, the couch totally counts). Whether you’re in the air, at the beach or on the go, your summer travel is experiential learning at work. Like students, we need to get our hands dirty and delve deeper than the facts. New sights, smells, tastes and people can refresh educators. It can lend you the “umph” you need to inspire a new group of students.

We know you’ll be growing during your travels this summer and we want to learn from you. Documenting your trips with a bulb digital portfolio not only helps you to preserve these special experiences for a lifetime, but also capture the learning you are doing to grow professionally as an educator.

Snap photos, capture video, record street sounds, annotate maps and reflect on your travels—all on bulb. Model this experiential learning cycle for your students.

Consider the following fundamentals of building a fantastic travel journal on bulb:

  • Use lots of colorful pictures. | Pro-Tip: The image carousel feature on bulb is an excellent way to incorporate several pictures without creating a page that scrolls too long.
  • Embed live video. | Pro-Tip: Keep it simple and use your phone.
  • Add annotated maps. | Pro-Tip: Use the screen-capture feature in the iOS version of bulb to annotate and narrate where you travelled.
  • Organize intentionally. | Pro-Tip: If you’re going to many different places, consider creating a page for each destination. If you are spending all summer in one location, think about creating a bulb page for each day you’re there.
  • Reflect often. | Pro-Tip: Be the student; reflect and refine your work. At the end of each day, answer the same handful of questions or free-write for five minutes.

Be realistic about how often you’ll be able to journal, set your goal and stick to it.

Check out these travel journals on bulb to get your creative juices flowing.

Semester at Sea Journal

This college student documented her Semester at Sea experience on her digital portfolio, one country at a time.

Service Trip Blog

These volunteers turned an outreach trip to an orphanage in Uganda into a multimedia, storytelling project about their experience working with foster children in the country

Road Trip Journal

Spin through image carousels of iconic national landmarks like Antelope Canyon and Horseshoe Bend as this bulb user recreates her road trip through the Southwest on bulb.

Have a bulb travel page or collection you are dying to share? Tag us on Facebook or Twitter @bulbapp and share the URL—we might feature yours in the next bulb newsletter.

Explore the Resource Center for more helpful resources. Or contact us to set up a demo. 

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3 Reasons Why bulb Makes Beautiful Digital Portfolios https://my.bulbapp.com/3-reasons-why-bulb-makes-beautiful-digital-portfolios/ https://my.bulbapp.com/3-reasons-why-bulb-makes-beautiful-digital-portfolios/#respond Tue, 26 Mar 2019 15:07:43 +0000 https://my.bulbapp.com/3-reasons-why-bulb-makes-beautiful-digital-portfolios/ 3 Reasons Why bulb Makes Beautiful Digital Portfolios Winston Churchill once said “We shape our buildings; thereafter they shape us.” In the last ten years, there’s been a huge push to redesign and beautify the spaces students learn in. Teachers started implementing flexible seating on their own, Starbucks became a flagship model for classroom design […]

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3 Reasons Why bulb Makes Beautiful Digital Portfolios

 

Winston Churchill once said “We shape our buildings; thereafter they shape us.”

In the last ten years, there’s been a huge push to redesign and beautify the spaces students learn in. Teachers started implementing flexible seating on their own, Starbucks became a flagship model for classroom design and started a Twitter trend to #ditchdesks.

This push to reconsider the look of the classroom doesn’t just please some teacher’s right-brain-inclined inner aesthete — it’s been well-researched as an advantageous pedagogical shift to increase efficacy and performance in schools.

One such study, undertaken by The University of Salford in 2015, provided conclusive evidence that the physical characteristics of a classroom — like air quality, color and light — can increase the learning progress of primary students by as much as 16 percent in a single year. Compounded, the effects can be much more.

“The most powerful impact is made by the physical design of the particular classroom in which they spend such a vitally important time with their teacher,” said John Coe, Chair of the National Association for Primary Education (NAPE).

The Eiffel Tower is the result of a competition in 1889 for monument plans during the World’s Fair. Today, it is the most visited paid monument in the world.

This shouldn’t come as a huge surprise to us — historically, society has valued, if not prioritized, exceptional architecture, prominent public installations and “civic beauty” zones for the betterment of every citizen’s well-being. Our physical spaces are reflections of who we are and the aspirations of who we want to become.

In the Architecture of Happiness, an exploration of the evolutionary impulse to build and beautify, Alain Botton said, “…at its most genuine, the architectural impulse seems connected to a longing for communication and commemoration, a longing to declare ourselves to the world through a register other than words, through the language of objects, colors and bricks: an ambition to let others know who we are — and, in the process, to remind ourselves.”

Beauty allows us to express who we are and who we hope to be. Beauty has the potential to create meaning in our lives — and the classroom is no exception.

It would make sense then that the place in which students spend an average of eight hours each day (the classroom) be beautiful. Thing is, there’s somewhere else they are spending just as much time that hasn’t been as considered in research and funding: the internet.

“No one is immune to bad design.” John Cary

Writer and architect John Cary believes design has a unique ability to dignify and make people feel valued, respected, honored and seen. Watch his TEDtalk on the subject above.

Ten years ago we may have been straddling the analog and digital divide, but today, we are fully immersed in both. There seems to be little no division between how we live our lives off and online — two worlds have become one. And just as beauty and good design are deeply powerful forces in the “real world,” so they are in the digital one.

An 8-12-year-old spends an average of six hours online each day, while high schoolers are spending nearly nine. Students are spending as much time in digital spaces as they are in physical ones, which means it’s time to take the design and intention of our digital tools seriously. There are very few educational technology business willing to dedicate the time it takes to develop thoughtful technology, and bulb is trying to change that.

bulb is in the beauty business.

We take design seriously, because we believe it’s the foundation of quality education, not the cherry on top. We know beautiful tools inspire beautiful work and beautiful work changes the world. This is why everything about how bulb functions has been thought through with an eye for beauty, an affinity for good design and a belief that the beautiful will save the world.

  • Covering the “how” so you can focus on the “what.” The best tools get out of the user’s way, so they can get down to what really matters — creating. bulb is intuitive and consistent, from our tile and list view layout to our dialog boxes. You shouldn’t ever have to guess how to do something  because we made  it obvious. This simplicity and ease frees up your time and energy to focus on your quality content, not the app.
  • Highly Limited Style Options. Not everyone has time to be a web designer. We understand the amount of time and training it takes to design good websites. Most students don’t need to reinvent the wheel every time they want to share their work. This is why we’ve pro-loaded fonts, colors and formatting to make is easy,  basically impossible, to make something look bad in your bulb digital portfolio. Go ahead, just try — we dare ya!
  • Plenty of whitespace. White space, or negative space, is the space between elements in a composition. You’ll see plenty of space between collections and pages and lines of text. Avoiding noise and clutter gives students a sense of balance, harmony, time and empowerment to create from a clean slate. You’ll notice your eye likes whitespace, too. It’s easier to read, pick out important information and connect ideas when your eyes have time and space to rest between bits of information.

Our digital environments, just like our physical ones, remind us who we are and, as architect John Cary put it, “literally shape our ideas about who we are in the world and what we deserve.”

bulb began with one big idea for education which was to make things beautiful. We are firm believers that beautiful platforms dignify the work students and educators are creating and we set out to create the mother of them all. We’re even crazy enough to think beautiful work can save the world.

Explore the Resource Center for more helpful resources. Or contact us to set up a demo. 

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How to Organize Your Digital Portfolio https://my.bulbapp.com/how-to-organize-your-digital-portfolio/ https://my.bulbapp.com/how-to-organize-your-digital-portfolio/#respond Wed, 13 Feb 2019 04:29:29 +0000 https://my.bulbapp.com/how-to-organize-your-digital-portfolio/ How to Organize Your Digital Portfolio   Creating a portfolio is a lot like writing a story. But this time, the protagonist is you or your students. A compelling story and stellar portfolio have a lot in common.  There is a beginning, middle and an end. There are clear delineations of events, times and places. There […]

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How to Organize Your Digital Portfolio

 

Creating a portfolio is a lot like writing a story. But this time, the protagonist is you or your students. A compelling story and stellar portfolio have a lot in common. 

There is a beginning, middle and an end. There are clear delineations of events, times and places. There are pages and chapters and sections. In short, information has been capsuled, compartmentalized and packaged into comprehensible, digestible chunks to move the story forward, one step at a time.

What’s the best way to organize a digital portfolio?

There are many, and no way is necessarily wrong. It is your story and how you tell is completely up to you. Here are some ideas to get started.

 

1) By subject

Organizing your portfolio by subject area. This may be a great option for showing inter-disciplinary in the work. Students can create a collection for each subject and within that collection, they can organize the projects, reflect and refine and present their work to peers for feedback.

 

2) By concept or standard

Many tech coaches or educators with a specialized role tend to organize their portfolio by idea or concept. If you have resources for achieving certain standards, teaching certain subjects, etc., organizing your work into collections might be easy. Plus, the sharing options on bulb allow you to select unique audiences for each collection within your portfolio. This is also a good option for students who wish to demonstrate their competency of a particular skill or for educators to document their professional development and credentials.

 

3) By assignment

If you or your student users are already singularly focused on a discipline, simply organizing your portfolio by assignment is a good option. 

 

4) By grade

This is an excellent organization option for younger students who use their portfolios to document their growth and show their progress over time. For educators who teach multiple grades and need to keep their curriculum clearly delineated, organizing collections by grade is the good option. 

Whatever approach you decide to take, one of the simplest ways to start is to organize all your content and keep it in bulb. This will make sure your work stays with you throughout your life.

Explore the Resource Center for more helpful resources. Or contact us to set up a demo. 

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Revolutionizing Education One ePortfolio at a Time https://my.bulbapp.com/revolutionizing-education/ https://my.bulbapp.com/revolutionizing-education/#respond Thu, 08 Mar 2018 20:14:59 +0000 https://my.bulbapp.com/revolutionizing-education/ Revolutionizing Education One ePortfolio at a Time   One of the fastest growth segments in EdTech is the digital portfolio. While once only for art, advertising, and architecture, traditional portfolios have transformed into a 21st-century digital liberator, now one of the most essential tools in education. Besides meeting many of the current needs for students […]

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Revolutionizing Education One ePortfolio at a Time

 

One of the fastest growth segments in EdTech is the digital portfolio. While once only for art, advertising, and architecture, traditional portfolios have transformed into a 21st-century digital liberator, now one of the most essential tools in education.

Besides meeting many of the current needs for students and teachers, digital portfolios also provide answers to several pressing issues facing modern education.

The creativity gap.

Sir Ken Robinson’s meteoric rise as the most-watched “TEDTalk” speaker of all time, fixates on the subject of creativity and education. Robinson surgically calls out traditional learning environments as the “killers of creativity.” He identifies this as “the great tragedy in education,” asking the question: “How can education provide an environment where creativity thrives and talent is discovered?” An initial but fundamental step toward cultivating creativity is the fundamental need to connect with the wider expressions of learning styles.

Enter the age of the digital portfolio, a multifaceted easy-to-use tool designed for gathering and expressing ideas combined with the capacity for teachers to provide clear and detailed feedback. Digital portfolios break down decades of learning barriers and elevate creative expression in ways unimagined. Now the learner and the teacher have the option of expressing ideas through various forms like video clips, audio files, photos, annotated images, graphics, written copy, etc. Learning is no longer limited to a single expression. Digital portfolios liberate traditional learning processes. The ability for students to create knowledge and demonstrate understanding and express their creativity is now only limited by the imagination.

How to develop lifelong learners.

Angela Duckworth, educator and researcher on the subject of childhood learning acquisition introduces a familiar but unique term for education. “Grit” says Duckworth, “is the missing quality in today’s classroom.” Duckworth’s research reveals that students who lack grit are incapable of building the skills necessary to become lifelong learners. Many students when faced with a difficult problem often give up when they fail to get the answer right the first time. When this pattern is repeated during early childhood education, the learning path often leads to chronic underachievement.

Stanford professor Carol Dweck says that throughout the 20th century the “Now” learning environment has conditioned students to think that problems must be answered precisely and immediately. The prevailing expectation has been “there is one path and one right answer and if you don’t get it right you’re wrong.” So, when students don’t get it right the first time the conclusion is they have failed. The results are devastating on confidence & motivation. Dweck says the shift education must make is to create a “yet” mindset.” In other words, when a student is confronted with a problem the student must understand that finding a solution involves a process. And while they may not “yet” have the answer they are discovering a process that will lead to the answer. Most importantly the student discovers their process. The fundamental change in pedagogy is the shift from “get it right the first time” to “haven’t yet discovered it.” It is the essential process of discovery that builds confidence, motivates curiosity and ultimately leads to Duckworth’s definition of “grit.”

So process is fundamental for effective education; showing work reveals the learning styles of individual students. Process also provides teachers and students a place to reflect and interact while discoveries are made.

The introduction of digital portfolios to 21st-century education provides a seismic shift in learning and teaching. Digital portfolios allow students to uniquely express themselves and establish their own unique path toward solving problems. Digital portfolios also serve as a window into the mind and heart of the learner. Teachers can see how students arrived at a certain conclusion and then engage with them in unique and practical ways. This process of learning is active and detailed and provides a “not yet but getting closer” mentality which builds confidence and promotes curiosity to higher learning. When students can break down their work into manageable steps and reflect on each of those decisions, engaging with their mistakes and misconceptions, there is a fundamental positive change that occurs. Students begin to learn that it’s not about immediately getting the right answer but rather learning the process of understanding. Most importantly digital portfolios emphasize process, feedback and reflection which develops confidence, self awareness and the motivation to learn for a lifetime.

How to tell the difference? The problem with GPAs, test scores and transcripts…

The traditional high school or college graduate validates their competency as a student with a few primary indicators: GPA, test scores, and transcripts. GPA reflects the level of a student’s overall general competency using a numerical scoring device. This scale is one of the indicators which supposedly reflects future success as a learner. What has become evident over time is this attributed “number” is actually very inaccurate when it comes to predicting long-term competency as a productive human being.

For the past several decades, SAT & ACT tests are used to determine the capacity and level of competency of a given student for future study. While the ability to take a test may reveal a certain level of knowledge or familiarity with a subject, these tests do very little in predicting success as a contributing member of society. Privileged students are tutored and practice for years before they actually take the test. Not only that, the tests are “super scored” so the students who can afford to retake the tests can do so as many times as they need in order to achieve the score they desire. One of the most significant criticisms of these college entrance exams is speed. Ultimate success in these standardized tests is determined by a student’s ability to take the tests quickly and accurately. Slower, more processed minded students are penalized for taking too much time and therefore don’t complete the various sections ultimately resulting in poorer scores.

Despite all the testing, transcript and GPA deficiencies, another common problem with these indicators is the amount of shockingly similar GPAs & transcripts. Countless high school graduates flood the college admissions boards every year with identical profiles. How can administrators and potential employers differentiate applicants?

Once again digital portfolios come to the rescue. The truth is, not all 4.0 GPA’s are created equal. Digital portfolios are a great differentiator among seemingly equal candidates. The proof of showing detailed work makes a significant difference in determining competency. Digital portfolios follow the student through their education so they provide support, proof and examples of learning style throughout the life of the student.

As education prices rise and competition increases for prestigious universities, an important question emerges: shouldn’t there be more to show for all this time, effort and cost? Shouldn’t there be a way for students to represent the body of their education in an easy, practical and beautiful way? For centuries subjects like Art and Architecture required extensive proof of competency and mastery over these subjects. With the emergence of the digital portfolio, the ability to “show” work is simple, portable and manageable for every subject. While good grades, test scores and beautiful diplomas may applaud certain kinds of accomplishment, they are not sufficient indicators of true competency and long-term success. All across the globe, there is an emerging demand that requires more than mere GPA’s, transcripts or diplomas. Proof of competency through the power of digital portfolios is a fabulous solution. Digital portfolios propel education into the 21st century. They foster creativity, they encourage lifelong learning and they provide a detailed view into the minds of students while simplifying and modernizing the teaching process.

The proof of an education should rest in two places, first, in the developed mind and heart of the student and second in a body of work representing the years of study. Ideally the latter comes in the form of an easy-to-access document that allows the creator to share, refine and use as a reference for competency and learning style as they transition to higher ed or begin their career. Sadly, few students have proof of their education. Some assignments and projects are saved but they are stored in shoeboxes and left in the attic. As the technological age matures, education is a primary target for reform and a digital portfolio is one of the most important tools to bring about the modern reformation of education.

The notion of leveraging technology in order to foster creativity and maximize learning potential is the reason digital portfolios exist. Digital portfolios allow users to gather information, develop ideas and create knowledge unrestricted by learning style. Additionally, they combine the ability to share and showcase work.

Explore the Resource Center for more helpful resources. Or contact us to set up a demo. 

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