Assessment Archives | bulb https://my.bulbapp.com/category/assessment/ 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 Assessment Archives | bulb https://my.bulbapp.com/category/assessment/ 32 32 231045334 Getting The Most Out of Capstone Projects with bulb Digital Portfolios at Turner Tech HS https://my.bulbapp.com/turner-tech-success-story/ Tue, 04 Aug 2020 19:53:18 +0000 https://my.bulbapp.com/?p=19809 Getting The Most Out of Capstone Projects with bulb Digital Portfolios at Turner Tech HS. Capstone Projects with bulb. Photo by aurora.kreativ on Unsplash. Principal Frazier of William H. Turner Tech High School empowers students through innovation and highlights the inspiring outcomes. William H. Turner Technical Arts High School, located in the inner city of […]

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Getting The Most Out of Capstone Projects with bulb Digital Portfolios at Turner Tech HS

Getting The Most Out of Capstone Projects with bulb Digital Portfolios at Turner Tech HS. Capstone Projects with bulb.

Photo by aurora.kreativ on Unsplash.

Principal Frazier of William H. Turner Tech High School empowers students through innovation and highlights the inspiring outcomes.

William H. Turner Technical Arts High School, located in the inner city of Miami, FL, is part of the Miami-Dade Public School System. M-DCPS is the 4th largest school district in the U.S. with 392 schools, and 133 of them on the U.S News & World Report list of 2020 Best High Schools.

Principal Uwezo Frazier of Turner Tech has over 24 years of experience in education. Fueled by giving back, sharing knowledge, and permeating it throughout the community, his plan continues to be to revolutionize education with innovation. One way he’s done this is through revamping the Senior Capstone Project.

"We're able to do all of this despite where we're located."

What is the Turner Tech Senior Capstone Project?

Turner is a total academy school with several nationally distinguished programs. All programs require a capstone project. Each senior works on their project and documents their progress in their bulb digital portfolio. Throughout the year, as students collect awards, demonstrate talents, and discover new passions and experiences they include them in their portfolios. While every grade level completes a capstone project, the emphasis is placed on the senior’s portfolios so they can be used to apply to colleges, internships, and jobs.

Before seniors graduate, they present their portfolios in front of the community. Creating a space for seniors to show who they are and what they know enables them to share with others that the challenges many of them experienced, growing up in inner-city Miami, does not define them.

Senior Capstone Projects has not always been so streamlined and empowering for seniors.

History of the Turner Tech Capstone Project

Before Principal Frazier, capstone projects were large stacks of papers passed back and forth between teachers, school leaders, and mentors. This paper-based system made it difficult for students to keep track of their work, and for teachers, leaders, and mentors to give meaningful feedback.

Concerned that students might exploit gray areas in the process and poke holes in a flawed system, Principal Frazier set out to find a new way. What would be a more streamlined way to document a student’s high school career? And what would be a more motivating system for the students to try their best?

Finding A Better Way

Motivated to find a more efficient process for everyone’s time and resources, Principal Frazier began challenging the status quo. His goal was to create an environment where students could thrive. He knew the capstone project could be life changing for all students, but first he would need to empower them.

He was approached by Dr. Lupe Diaz, Executive Director of CTE for the Miami-Dade County Public Schools, about using bulb Digital Portfolios as the paperless, efficient solution for the Senior Capstone Project. After thoroughly reviewing what it would take to implement the digital solution across the school, he decided to give bulb a try. William H. Turner Tech became the first Miami-Dade School to implement bulb on their campus.

Implementing the Digital Process

Making this drastic change to a deeply embedded process was going to be challenging. Using his 24 years of experience, Principal Frazier knew his first step towards implementing bulb across the school was to inspire the educators. In a May 2020 bulb Webinar, Principal Frazier went into detail about how he did this, and offered the following advice to administrators for implementing new EdTech tools school-wide:

  • As the Principal, it starts with YOU. The entire building adopts the tone of the principal. Teachers, students and admin will gravitate to your personality and how you handle things.
  • Speak passionately about the new tool. If you’re not passionate about it, your staff won’t be. See the first bullet point for more.
  • Your words are important. Using the phrase, “We are doing this,” shows you’re in this new process with them. They’ll follow your lead.
  • Do not underestimate the role the entire leadership team plays in the implementation process. These initiatives require a lot of admin support to ensure things run smoothly after implementing changes.

In addition to inspiring his staff, Principal Frazier regularly checks in with teachers and students to gain a pulse on how everyone’s doing. Some of his methods include:

  • “Inspect for success.” Walking the building and seeing for himself how the tool is being used. When school became remote, he joined the virtual classes to see how the work was coming along.
  • Celebrating success, big or small.
  • Controlling the narrative. If he hears negativity, he listens and stops it. Negativity will set a school back.
  • Making sure the students are able to articulate the new technology to their teachers, peers and parents.
  • Finding meaningful rewards for teachers and students when they adopt the new technology.

What’s happened since implementing bulb?

The most impressive benefit  of implementing a digital tool all students can use in their own way has been the evolution of quiet students finding their voice. Using the digital platform each student, introverted or extroverted, can decide how to showcase their work, capabilities, and processes in the way they are most comfortable and confident with. 

Students at Turner Tech High School have been accepted to Ivy League Schools and HBCUs, and have landed prestigious internships. Principal Frazier attributes the students’ successes to the Senior Capstone Project. While students have always been able to discover and show to the world their passions, dreams, and capabilities, now with bulb Digital Portfolios they can continue this practice for life.

Watch Principal Frazier's full webinar recap here

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How to Use Digital Portfolios for Assessments https://my.bulbapp.com/assessment-infographic-blog/ https://my.bulbapp.com/assessment-infographic-blog/#respond Wed, 10 Jun 2020 13:47:12 +0000 https://my.bulbapp.com/assessment-infographic-blog/ Photo by Myriam Jessier on Unsplash. Edited. Learn How the Top Three Forms of Assessment Pair with bulb for Dynamic Results   Educators assess students using a variety of methods. With the shift to remote learning, they are finding it more difficult to engage students in learning. And research has proven that standardized tests, plug-in […]

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Photo by Myriam Jessier on Unsplash. Edited.

Learn How the Top Three Forms of Assessment Pair with bulb for Dynamic Results

 

Educators assess students using a variety of methods. With the shift to remote learning, they are finding it more difficult to engage students in learning. And research has proven that standardized tests, plug-in answers, and surface level tests only capture recognition. Educators are using this time to reimagine authentic assessments and the tools they use. When pairing assessments with digital portfolios, not only will student’s capture their learning process, they will take ownership of their learning, while educators gain deeper knowledge for each of their students.

Assessment + bulb Digital Portfolios

bulb Digital Portfolios is the place to store artifacts of learning from any form of assessment. It is both the creation and curation place where students take ownership of their learning, activate metacognition, and reflection. Digital portfolios allow educators to see their students apply the learning and help gauge the student’s understanding of the learning process.

The platform makes it easy for students and educators to find all of their assessments in one place, instead of scrolling through an LMS. Other apps used for assessment like FlipGrip, Google Forms, Nearpod, etc, can all be embedded within bulb. No matter the type of assessment you use to meet your classroom’s needs, bulb makes it easy to assess a student’s speaking, reading, writing, listening, and critical thinking skills.

The Results

With users around the world, bulb has a unique perspective into the results of pairing alternative assessment and digital portfolios. From speaking with bulb users, we’ve compiled a list of the top 8 results teachers, parents, and students experience:

 

Documenting growth over time: A digital portfolio tracks student work from year to year, showing a holistic view of their growth over time. Here is an example from a 3rd grader, Kaden, who shows his writing progression over the years. Other forms of summative assessments can be documented in bulb—like unit reflections, final projects, or final portfolio reviews to show process and progress over time. Educators can also provide rubrics within a bulb page to help guide students when completing assignments.

Encouraging creativity: bulb digital portfolios gives students options in how they express their learning. They can add interactive media, outside sources, audio recordings, videos, and images to truly show what they know and make the learning their own. Students in this bulb page created a video to show they fully understood the science principle they were learning about.

Metacognition: Digital portfolios show the process of learning, helping students identify their strengths and weaknesses. Because students can document each step, this encourages them to reflect on what they did and become more aware of their thought process. See how an 8th grader, Angela Olsen, reflects on personal goals within her portfolio.

Ownership of learning: bulb is built for life. When a student graduates, or moves, they can take their work with them by adding a personal email address to their account. , Over time, students who have actively used their digital portfolio will be able to see all of their work and accomplishments. Seeing the whole picture of their growth encourages them to continually learn. William Robinson III has built his portfolio since college and over the course of his career, and it shows the remarkable outcomes of having a digital portfolio for life.

Personalized learning: When master teacher Belinda Medellin uses digital portfolios to assess her students, she can easily give them personalized feedback and instruction. Digital portfolios help her keep track of each student’s progress with each subject she teaches. Having a tangible record of a student’s work that she can access at any time allows her to respond to each of her student’s goals and identify how she can help them achieve them.

Displaying capabilities & competencies: Digital portfolios help students display capabilities and competencies. A great example of this is Caroline Schulze’s portfolio. As a civil engineering student at the Oregon Institute of Technology, she uses her portfolio to keep track of her diverse interests and talents. She then shows to her portfolio visitors how she brings her learning and talents together in her Capstone Project, providing evidence of what she’s capable of.

Iteration: Learning is an iterative process and assessments help the learner identify where they are at. With a dynamic digital portfolio, students can revisit and build upon their past work. They can take feedback and apply it, and see the progression of their learning. Shrayes G, an art student, captured evidence of composition over multiple years.

Learning beyond the classroom: Work can be done within a digital portfolio at any time, from anywhere, on any device. For educators using authentic assessments, this is a dream come true. Students can be encouraged to engage with the world outside of the classroom then share it in their digital portfolio. These experiences can then be easily shared with teachers, future employers, colleges, and peers. Take a look at Derrell Walker, who started using his digital portfolio to document coursework, and is now using it to document his career in culinary arts.

 

One thing is for sure: No matter the form of assessment, when paired with a digital portfolio the results are dynamic.
What results will you discover?

bulb + is free for educators, always. Try bulb.

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

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How to Make Capstone Projects in a Digital Portfolio https://my.bulbapp.com/how-to-make-capstone-projects-in-a-digital-portfolio/ Fri, 15 Mar 2019 04:22:04 +0000 https://my.bulbapp.com/how-to-make-capstone-projects-in-a-digital-portfolio/ How to Make Capstone Projects in a Digital Portfolio Many capstone projects culminate with a presentation. Let’s face it, not everyone is comfortable standing up in front of the room to present to classmates and peers. However, it’s an important life skill we all need. Here are some tips to ease the pain and help […]

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How to Make Capstone Projects in a Digital Portfolio

 

Many capstone projects culminate with a presentation. Let’s face it, not everyone is comfortable standing up in front of the room to present to classmates and peers. However, it’s an important life skill we all need. Here are some tips to ease the pain and help students build professional presentation building skills for life.

Reflect on presentation material.

Are your students taking time to document, reflect and understand the processes they used to construct their presentation? Documenting the process and reflecting on the project can help students prepare the script or talking points.  And when student go back through the project, teachers gain insights into the process and progress.

Here are some reflection questions to help your students organize their thoughts, ponder what they learned and how to present their findings.

  • What inspired the presentation idea?
  • What prior knowledge did you have of the presentation material before you started?
  • What part of the project came most easily to you?
  • What part of the project are you most proud of?
  • What area was the most challenging? How did you tackle those challenges? Would you have approached those challenges differently if you were to do it over again?
  • What area do you think you grew the most?
  • What does the audience need to know about the process of your project that they might not have already known?
  • What artifacts (pictures, videos, audio files, etc.) will be needed to support the main idea?

Use powerful and effective presentation tools.

What tools are students using to communicate their ideas? How can students use several different tools to share their work and ideas that will last beyond presentation day?

We recommend these.

  • All your work in one place. Create, publish and present all from the same tool, such as bulb Digital Portfolios, in a sleek, integrated way. Not only will this alleviate stress for you and your students, who are trying to tie up many loose ends at the end of the year, but parents will thank you for the permanence of their students’ work. Have your students try a digital portfolio tool, like bulb.
  • Web Apps means no technical issues. Need to get through 30 presentations in one day? Don’t do the USB/cable/projector dance. Present from the same platform on any device. The only requirement is having access to the internet. When your presentation is built in bulb, it’s available from anywhere. Simply access it using your secure log-in and password.
  • Use images. Images say a 1,000 words, right? Combined with text, images are powerful and can convey a lot of emotion and provide context. Images can be created by the student or sourced online, but make sure your students are honoring copyright law. Pixabay and Unsplash are two free image sites, among many more.
  • Video and audio clips to capture a student’s actual voice. A student might find that they communicate more effectively through the spoken word, more so than the written word. Have them record a voice clip on their iPad or phone and upload it to a bulb page.
  • Create an infographic. We live in a visual world and our brains tend to love information presented in an organized, graphical and interesting manner. You can create infographics on canva or content interactive using ThingLink.
  • Break up dense blocks of text. Be thoughtful about organizing your information and breaking your content into digestible paragraphs. Be intentional about breaking your content into paragraphs. Use headers to categorize information visually. Use bullets and numbers when listing pieces of a whole. Hyperlink when possible and provide more information by giving images and videos captions. 

Visual, interactive presentations are just better. We know the one-size-fits-all learning method doesn’t work anymore. Your students can be presenting information in more than one way, whether it means an image, video, audio file or more.

Examples

automotive designer

This student documents her process of creating a final art project. She introduces her passion for cars, the object of her piece, to lay a foundation for the project. She builds out the history of car art and how she became interested in them. Then she brings us step by step through her art process — from drafting to adding color and texture, and editing.

This group of students researched, identified and tackled the issue of endangered elephants in Africa by creating a kinetic elephant model and presenting it to the Dallas Zoo. See how the project evolved, from start to finish.

This design student builds out every step of the ideation process behind a brand’s logo.

See how she moves through the process herself to create a logo for her own make belief company.

 

The combination of infographic, images, videos and lists make this page easy and enjoyable to digest.

 

Watch this video to learn how you can present your work on bulb

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

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5 Reasons Digital Portfolios are Meaningful Assessment Tools https://my.bulbapp.com/5-reasons-digital-portfolios-are-meaningful-assessment-tools/ https://my.bulbapp.com/5-reasons-digital-portfolios-are-meaningful-assessment-tools/#respond Wed, 20 Feb 2019 22:04:14 +0000 https://my.bulbapp.com/5-reasons-digital-portfolios-are-meaningful-assessment-tools/ 5 Reasons Digital Portfolios are Meaningful Assessment Tools   Looking for Meaningful Assessment Tools? Here are 5 Reasons to Consider Digital Portfolios It’s no longer breaking news that digital portfolios are a powerful assessment for measuring competencies and empowering students to tell their whole learning story. Here are 5 reasons why educators across the K-12 […]

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5 Reasons Digital Portfolios are Meaningful Assessment Tools

5 Reasons Digital Portfolios are Meaningful Assessment Tools

 
Looking for Meaningful Assessment Tools? Here are 5 Reasons to Consider Digital Portfolios

It’s no longer breaking news that digital portfolios are a powerful assessment for measuring competencies and empowering students to tell their whole learning story.

Here are 5 reasons why educators across the K-12 spectrums are using digital portfolios. 

1. Authentic assessment of student work.

When the portfolio is implemented across general education courses, it illuminates the students work in a new light, demonstrating how students actually do (or do not) progress towards learning outcomes via the assignments they receive across disciplines.

2. Show the cumulative efforts and learning of a student over time.

Portfolios offer teachers the bigger picture when it comes to grading, giving them a much more thorough view of what the student actually has learned or accomplished over the course of a program, course, project or unit.

 
3. Measure what matters. Real work and the use of knowledge.

Portfolios document real student work and capture the meaningful application of knowledge and skills. Unlike a multiple choice test or essay, portfolios tell the full story of learning and growth and showcase new skills through the collection of authentic performances. Documenting and building skills for the future is critical for students and a bulb Digital Portfolios helps keep a comprehensive record of work.

 
4. Track growth and progress over a year, years and a lifetime.

Without knowing where a student has come from, it’s impossible to determine how much they have or have not learned. As long-term records of their work, portfolios allow teachers to take into consideration where a particular student started to more effectively evaluate their performance.

 
5.  Provide a comprehensive record of learning.

Many colleges and universities are moving away from SAT and ACT test scores as a method for admissions, so as not to miss out on top candidates that may not test as well as their peers. Portfolios are a solution several have turned to, as they collect evidence of experience related to outcomes that actually matter to student success at the university level and beyond.

“A portfolio of work is a curated experience. It’s an applicant’s chance to shape the way that I’m viewing his or her approach, methods, process, and best thinking; but oftentimes, a portfolio only contains final pieces, as applicants are overly concerned about presenting perfection. Polish doesn’t communicate process though, and therefore I’m left with only part of the story. Messy problems — and how applicants work through them — can show a great deal more in a portfolio than one finished, airtight solution. It’s then the applicant’s job to curate those into an experience for the portfolio viewer.”

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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