Dilemmas Faced Establishing Portfolio Assessment of Pre-Service Teachers in the Southeastern United States

College Student JournalVol. 39 Nbr. 3, September 2005

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Summary


There is increasing pressure to evaluate and document the capabilities of students exiting teacher education programs. A professional portfolio can serve as an effective tool for documenting this process. Faculty wishing to institute portfolios in pre-service teacher assessment should be aware of the difficulties that arise during discourse and planning. Court ruling on professional practice should be incorporated into the mind-set of committees when developing procedures and polices of portfolio management. The notion of teacher professionalism as identified by the courts should serve as fuel for continued deliberations to incorporate portfolio assessment strategies into a program. A positive offshoot of portfolio deliberations can be the development of program-wide mission statement or vision for the teaching profession.

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Dilemmas Faced Establishing Portfolio Assessment of Pre-Service Teachers in the Southeastern United States

Portfolio assessment is often used by faculty in teacher preparation programs as part of the graduation requirements for preservice teachers. In some cases, portfolio assessment has replaced the traditional "exit exam". The purpose of portfolio assessment in either case is to receive a more thorough and accurate portrayal of the future teachers' abilities and skills in the classroom and in the school. Authors such as Cavanaugh and Linek (1995), Peterson (1989), and Ryan and Kuhs (1993) suggest that portfolios show the abilities and interests of the student. They further purport that a major value of portfolio creation is for the student to self-evaluate their understanding and personal growth. Such portfolios would contain documentation of attitudes, behaviors, achievement, improvements, thinking, and reflective self-evaluation (Linek, 1991).

Students select items for portfolio inclusion so as to exhibit that they possess the knowledge and skills needed to teach. The breadth and quality of materials a student chooses for inclusion in his/her exit portfolio, substantiates that she/he is ready for full time induction into the classroom. Such self-evaluation would be consistent with the literature on self-re flection (Schon, 1983, p. 50). Student's need to think about what they are doing while they are doing it if they are to become effective teachers in the K-12 schools (for an example of portfolio directions see Appendix A).

Reflective action on the student's part assis...

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