Two-way impact: Institutional e-learning policy/educator practices in creative arts through ePortfolio creation

While tertiary institutions in Australia are embracing e-learning and urging, or making compulsory, some use by academics, it is often the educators themselves who engage with innovative e-learning approaches. These approaches, in turn, influence others in the institution and the institution’s thin...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Blom, Diana, Rowley, J., Bennett, Dawn, Hitchcock, M., Dunbar-Hall, P.
Other Authors: Ciussi, M.
Format: Conference Paper
Published: European Conference on e-Learning 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/22927
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author Blom, Diana
Rowley, J.
Bennett, Dawn
Hitchcock, M.
Dunbar-Hall, P.
author2 Ciussi, M.
author_facet Ciussi, M.
Blom, Diana
Rowley, J.
Bennett, Dawn
Hitchcock, M.
Dunbar-Hall, P.
author_sort Blom, Diana
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description While tertiary institutions in Australia are embracing e-learning and urging, or making compulsory, some use by academics, it is often the educators themselves who engage with innovative e-learning approaches. These approaches, in turn, influence others in the institution and the institution’s thinking on e-learning. This paper focuses on the introduction or extension of ePortfolio usage into four creative arts departments in Australian universities. Each creative arts educator adopted the ePortfolio for a different purpose – music performance, theatre performance, music technology, music teacher training, professional writing - and in doing so has influenced, or at least is being monitored by, their university. All four projects have resulted in growth, development and enrichment of teaching and learning because of the ePortfolio’s facility to engage students in such activities as reflection, ongoing student-teacher dialogue, collaborative essay writing, peer evaluation, identity formation, long-term career planning, and, in doing so, to influence institutional curriculum design and e-learning policy.The researchers wanted to assess the use of ePortfolio for creative arts students in how they could appropriately document skills, competencies and graduate attributes learnt during their degree programs for career readiness. Literature notes institutional interest in ePortfolios for purposes including career preparation (Reese and Levy, 2009); demonstrating and assessing student learning (Jafuri, 2004); academic advising (Reese and Levy, 2009); and addressing public accountability concerns (Lorenzo and Ittelson, 2005a) by facilitating internal and external departmental review and accreditation (Reese and Levy, 2009). Within the four creative arts departments of our study the two-way impact between institution and educator is discussed. The findings of this study will inform future development of curriculum, policy and practice for creative arts students and academics in a variety of tertiary institutions. ePortfolios provide an efficient and transparent means to archive and access student work, and facilitate internal and external departmental review and broader institutional assessment.
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format Conference Paper
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T07:45:55Z
publishDate 2013
publisher European Conference on e-Learning
recordtype eprints
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-229272023-02-08T04:11:35Z Two-way impact: Institutional e-learning policy/educator practices in creative arts through ePortfolio creation Blom, Diana Rowley, J. Bennett, Dawn Hitchcock, M. Dunbar-Hall, P. Ciussi, M. Augier, M. reflexive practice curriculum enhancement creative arts ePortfolio e-learning policy While tertiary institutions in Australia are embracing e-learning and urging, or making compulsory, some use by academics, it is often the educators themselves who engage with innovative e-learning approaches. These approaches, in turn, influence others in the institution and the institution’s thinking on e-learning. This paper focuses on the introduction or extension of ePortfolio usage into four creative arts departments in Australian universities. Each creative arts educator adopted the ePortfolio for a different purpose – music performance, theatre performance, music technology, music teacher training, professional writing - and in doing so has influenced, or at least is being monitored by, their university. All four projects have resulted in growth, development and enrichment of teaching and learning because of the ePortfolio’s facility to engage students in such activities as reflection, ongoing student-teacher dialogue, collaborative essay writing, peer evaluation, identity formation, long-term career planning, and, in doing so, to influence institutional curriculum design and e-learning policy.The researchers wanted to assess the use of ePortfolio for creative arts students in how they could appropriately document skills, competencies and graduate attributes learnt during their degree programs for career readiness. Literature notes institutional interest in ePortfolios for purposes including career preparation (Reese and Levy, 2009); demonstrating and assessing student learning (Jafuri, 2004); academic advising (Reese and Levy, 2009); and addressing public accountability concerns (Lorenzo and Ittelson, 2005a) by facilitating internal and external departmental review and accreditation (Reese and Levy, 2009). Within the four creative arts departments of our study the two-way impact between institution and educator is discussed. The findings of this study will inform future development of curriculum, policy and practice for creative arts students and academics in a variety of tertiary institutions. ePortfolios provide an efficient and transparent means to archive and access student work, and facilitate internal and external departmental review and broader institutional assessment. 2013 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/22927 European Conference on e-Learning fulltext
spellingShingle reflexive practice
curriculum enhancement
creative arts
ePortfolio
e-learning policy
Blom, Diana
Rowley, J.
Bennett, Dawn
Hitchcock, M.
Dunbar-Hall, P.
Two-way impact: Institutional e-learning policy/educator practices in creative arts through ePortfolio creation
title Two-way impact: Institutional e-learning policy/educator practices in creative arts through ePortfolio creation
title_full Two-way impact: Institutional e-learning policy/educator practices in creative arts through ePortfolio creation
title_fullStr Two-way impact: Institutional e-learning policy/educator practices in creative arts through ePortfolio creation
title_full_unstemmed Two-way impact: Institutional e-learning policy/educator practices in creative arts through ePortfolio creation
title_short Two-way impact: Institutional e-learning policy/educator practices in creative arts through ePortfolio creation
title_sort two-way impact: institutional e-learning policy/educator practices in creative arts through eportfolio creation
topic reflexive practice
curriculum enhancement
creative arts
ePortfolio
e-learning policy
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/22927