Southampton Solent University, UK


Summary : e-portfolio implementation and use at Southampton Solent University

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Case study Home Page An overview of use The implementation journey

 

Key words

Southampton Solent, UK, HE, Higher Education, CPD, PDP, Personal development, careers, employability, skills awareness, student ownership, innovative assessment methods, Mahara, Web2.0 tools, interoperable, transportable, exportable.

 

e-portfolios used since 2009

  

Numbers of users with access to e-portfolios

Staff = 1000
Students = 19,000

Numbers of students and staff who are active users = 11,500 students, 200 staff.

  

What is distinctive about this implementation case study

 

Institutional Drivers

 

Tool used

 

Implementation features for eportfolio managers

 

Implementation features for technologists

  

The nature of e-portfolio use

  

Mahara is used as a key employability enhancement tool. The e-portfolio is being used across the whole institution with elements of formal use in particular academic units (modules) that are delivered to a wide number of courses; on an individual or group basis for academic projects; by individual students completely informally for personal or social use; by members of staff for formal working groups. The key is that anyone in the University can use the tool as they feel appropriate, create their own groups, invite members, and publish views locally or publicly.

 

The exemplars selected represent a range of activities up to 2011.

 

Intra course - localised use

Inter/ whole course –> cross dept/ school/ faculty use

Cross institution
use

Extra- curricular
use

 

Group project work: online private space for collaboration and group assessment in School of Computing

Exemplar 2

 

 Reflective journal for assessment in Environment and Geography, Lifestyle Project:

Exemplar 3

 

 

 

Assessment, CV building and self-promotion: core module, Journalism Portfolios  Exemplar 1

 

 

 

Collation of employability skills: Solent Employability Awareness scheme

Exemplar 4

 

 

The nature of the implementation journey

 

Solent had in place the VLE Moodle, CareerBox (online careers guidance package) and a paper-based PDP process. A senior academic, who became the champion of the implementation, the  Reader in Teaching and Learning, is a member of the Solent Life Group (The Solent Life Group is a working group reporting to the Academic Standards and Development Committee - The Group is specifically dedicated to the enhancement of teaching and student learning within the curriculum, and the learning opportunities that are additional to the curriculum)  and saw the need/opportunity for an e-portfolio implementation. She pressed the question: ‘Where is the student in all this?’ and a sequence of two collaborative, cross-departmental projects was approved Solent Life and involved user consultation and testing, evaluations and the production of influential, evidence-based reports which were presented to senior management:

 

There has also been a significant amount of interaction between the implementation team and e-portfolio implementers outside the University, especially the Moodle user community nationally and internationally. This has brought rapid suggestions for problem-solving from practitioners, deepened the team's thinking through challenging their assumptions (Why are you doing it like that?) and saved them from institutional introversion. Almost half the University population (staff and students) are now active users of the e-portfolio and a Mahara Development Group brings all the stakeholders together to oversee the continuing implementation. The next step is to look at integration with TurnItIn.

 

Overview

 

 

Stage 0: Prior developments Stage 1: Planning Stage 2: Early adoption Stage 3: Embedding Stage 4: Sustaining

Moodle VLE and online careers guidance package in place

 

Perception that paper-based PDP process may need replacing with an online system

2008-09 Research project chose Mahara for a study carried out by a collaborative, cross-departmental team: Fostering Student Personal Development and Employability

 

July 2009 Promotional video for internal use

 

Summer 2009 Server and system funded. Mahara given Solent theme, customized and links to Career Box embedded

2009-2010

Implementation project

 

Sept 2009 Staff and students recruited for four pilots

 

Student induction pages and staff help pages developed

 

Careers service promoted independent use by students through CV support work

 

 

 

Summer 2010 University created 2-yr p-t Teaching Fellow posts in each faculty to lead embedding

From summer 2010, validation of academic units (course/modules) requires inclusion of e-portfolio

 

Faculty plans include increasing adoption

 

Targets are provided for increasing numbers of students accessing the e-portfolio

 

October 2010 Mahara Development Group launched to oversee ongoing developments

 

 

Managing organisational change

 

Governance, leadership and vision

The project vision and lead came from Barbara Lee, Reader in Teaching and Learning. The first project to trial the Mahara e-portfolio generated important evaluation results which were presented to the Senior Management Team. This group welcomed what was a research-based, worked-up solution to the challenge of supporting the development of students' employability, a major strategic priority for the University. From this a further presentation was made to members of the Vice-Chancellor's Office. The Solent Life Group authorised institutional implementation in Summer 2010, at the same time as the Academic Standards and Development Committee approved the creation of a Teaching Fellow post in each faculty (part-time secondments) to lead the roll-out and embedding of the e-portfolio alongside generic outcomes of other TQEF projects. The breadth of commitment across the institution is reflected in the scope of the membership of the recently constituted Mahara Development Group which brings all the stakeholders together to oversee continuation of the implementation (see below). The Mahara Development group advises the Solent Life Group and the Dean of LIS. The ongoing implementation of Mahara is part of the Learning Information Service Development Plan for 2010-2011 and identified as a key quality enhancement priority by Academic Standards and Development Committee. The DVC was both impressed and suprised by the size and success of the take-up and was keen to see the success spread across the university.

 

Alignment with the institutional context

  

DRIVERS influencing the start of the initiative

 

Employability. Personal Development Planning.   

 

TECHNOLOGIES

Mahara was chosen for the pilot as it fitted well with other existing technology and met all the needs of the pilot. Mahara adopted, and integrated with the VLE (Moodle) and Careers support website (CareerBox).

 

Following the pilot it was decided by the group to continue Mahara's usage into the production environment as it met the needs of the users and had a promising developmental roadmap.

 

  

Developing expertise / engaging with stakeholders

 

Staffing and supporting the implementation  

 

The availability of TQEF funding has been instrumental in bringing about this e-portfolio implementation. There have been two projects. The first provided seed funding, resources for making the promotional videos and putting on events. The awarding of the second project recognised the success of the first and was explicitly for implementation. Time from the Learning Technology Unit was allocated to the projects as core business, some was bought out by the project funding as an even 50/50 split. Funding also had to be negotiated for the provision of a server (July 2009). Some further funding is being sought from the University Strategic Development Plan fund (SDP). Once the system was launched it became part of the baseline support of the Learning Technology Unit as a core system.

 

Summer 2010: Academic Standards and Development Committee approved the creation of a Teaching Fellow post in each faculty (part-time secondments) to lead the roll-out and embedding of the e-portfolio alongside generic outcomes of other TQEF projects

 

The Mahara Development Group was set up from October 2010. It includes: Reader in Teaching and Learning; 4 x Teaching and Learning Fellows; Learning Technologist; Employer Engagement Specialist; Careers and Employability Manager; Careers Advisor; Learning Systems Development Manager. Visiting Members: Students; Lecturers; Support Staff; SDP Consultant

 

Professional development for staff

Staff help pages were developed in 2009-2010.

 

A MoodleMoot presentation April 2010 reported that some members of staff outside of pilot groups were conceptualising e-portfolios as tools for assessment rather than for personal development. However, others were starting to redevelop their units to incorporate Mahara into their students’ learning.

 

Student engagement

From the beginning, the e-portfolio was envisaged as an electronic storage space for students, accessible from and integrated with the VLE, which they could use to organise and present information to prospective employers. Both tutors and careers advisers have encouraged take-up, and, beyond this, students individually have picked up Mahara by contagion, empowered by the availability and usability of excellent examples and support materials provided by the Learning Technology Unit (LTU). The Careers Service has played an important role in relation to students' independent use, promoting the e-portfolio as part of CV support.

 

Feedback on the first project indicated that the e-portfolio had to be as easy as Facebook, but that students perceived that their material would be safer, because backed up by the University, while they would still have ownership - 'I want it to be mine.' Students were very positive, once they understood that they wouldn't have to show staff items from their e-portfolio which they didn't wish to show.

 

The explicit purpose of the second project was to focus on how best to engage students. Student focus groups were convened. The Project Team wrote a script and commissioned an animation from a second year student to create a promotional video for students. Through usability research carried out in January 2010, students were recruited and were paid to complete five pre-defined tasks in Mahara without tutor assistance, to evaluate the ease of use for the self-directed learner. Independent use by students has taken off.

 

 

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