Portfolio Assessment
Portfolio Assessment
ASSESSMENT OF EDUCATION
PERFORMANCE
(With academic accreditation and computer aided
testing and review)
Portfolio assessments are not a type of assessment item, but rather a compilation of
student work. Portfolio assessments ask students or teachers to collect work products that
show growth over a specific period.
II. OBJECTIVES:
A good practice in collecting the portfolio entries is to have a log of all entries with a few
descriptions of how they were obtained and why they were kept in the portfolio.
3. Select - this is the stage where the students select what will finally be used to gauge their
success from all their collections of possible entries in a portfolio.
❑ The selection usually depends on what the teacher requires them to do, their parents’
choice, and the entries that they personally chose as the best gauge of their
accomplishment in the program.
❑ Selections could include evidence that shows in-and out of class activities
participated in by the students in relation to the program.
4. Organize - this is the stage where the students decide on how they will organize their
entries.
❑ There should be a table of contents for easy location of portfolio entries.
❑ The organization of the portfolio should be flexible to allow one to add, modify or
delete any entry anytime.
❑ Take the portfolio assessment as an opportunity for the students to develop or hone
their creativity and resourcefulness.
❑ Examples of materials used in making portfolios are clear books, albums, accordion
bags, boxes with dividers, envelopes, colored magazines, CDs, flash drives or cloud-
based storage.
5. Reflect - an important trait of a portfolio is the presence of the student’s reflections of
his/her experiences.
❑ Making reflective journals, log of entries, and labeling evidence in a portfolio are just
some of the different ways to show one’s knowledge, understanding, attitudes, values,
writing skills and creativity of ideas of the students.
❑ This is the opportunity for the students to reflect on the meaningfulness of their
experiences as well as the impact of their teacher’s styles and methodology in
teaching.
6. Evaluate - This is the stage where the students, their peers and teachers, or even the
parents are involved in rating the achievement of the students based on their evidence of
learning, their reflections of their experiences, and the organizations of their portfolio.
❑ Rubrics are often used in rating students’ performance using their portfolios.
❑ Rubrics in rating portfolios should be given to the students even at the beginning of
the portfolio process so that they are guided on what to put in their portfolio and how
to organize them based on the criteria and indicators of a quality product or excellent
performance.
❑ Evaluation of the portfolio could be done by individual entry on a specified date with
immediate feedback given to the students or when the development is complete where
the teacher could infer the personal traits of the students.
7. Confer - this is the stage when the teachers confer with the students or parents to discuss
the performance of the students. This is also the time to congratulate the students for their
accomplishment or to help the students identify areas for improvement.
8. Exhibit - this is the time to celebrate success in the form of an exhibit of students’
portfolios.