ORGANIZATION TIPS--
First, there are no requirements for a minimum number of pieces you must include in each section or how you must organize your work. Once you have selected and collected your work, you must decide which section it goes in, how to display it, and what to say about what it shows.You don’t have to stick with one organizational strategy for all the pages. These are just some ideas for how you might organize your reflection and the exhibits for a particular page:
Other Organizational Tips:
First, there are no requirements for a minimum number of pieces you must include in each section or how you must organize your work. Once you have selected and collected your work, you must decide which section it goes in, how to display it, and what to say about what it shows.You don’t have to stick with one organizational strategy for all the pages. These are just some ideas for how you might organize your reflection and the exhibits for a particular page:
- Highlights- This strategy uses that page to show significant examples, moving from the most significant to the least.
- Narrative- You may choose to move linearly from beginning to end in a way that tracks growth (telling a story of growth) through a series of examples.
- Compare and Contrast- This strategy focuses using that page to show a series of contrasting examples of learning, by showing an piece that demonstrates an early skill, opinion or way of thinking and one that shows the growth or contrast at the end of the semester.
Other Organizational Tips:
- You may also use extra images, quotes, videos, and other evidence from outside your own work to help illustrate your learning and engagement.
- If you use the same piece twice or have explained something in a previous section, you are welcome to HYPERLINK to that section to avoid repetition.
- You should also hyperlink to particular blog entries when discussing them in reflections, or you may take screen shots of excerpts (or use a snipping tool).