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Learning Portfolio Program

The learning portfolio program at Loyola University Chicago seeks to connect the high-impact practice of learning portfolios (ePortfolios) in the curriculum through experiential learning/engaged learning courses, in order to: 

  1. Enhance teaching and learning strategies for faculty,
  2. Provide integrative learning experiences for students, and
  3. Develop teaching and learning assessment opportunities at the course, program, and institutional level. 

The goal is to make learning holistic, integrative, tangible, and portable for students through an evidence-based demonstration of their learning experiences.

Learning Portfolio Outcomes:
As a result of constructing a learning portfolio, students will be able to:

  1. Integrate learning through critical reflection, to connect and synthesize disciplinary knowledge, out-of-classroom experiences, and lived experiences to generate new understanding.
  2. Identify personal development from new understanding of their own and others’ perspectives.
  3. Articulate a developing identity as a lifelong learner through academic experiences, community-based experiences, co-curricular experiences, and future goals.
  4. Demonstrate critical reflection upon social justice issues and Loyola’s Jesuit mission.

WHAT IS A LEARNING PORTFOLIO?

A high-impact learning tool

  • A learning portfolio (also referred to as an ePortfolio) is a digital collection of a person's work, ideas, and personal expression.
  • Learning portfolios may showcase learning progression, evidence of growth, achievement, personal goals, and self-reflection. They include carefully selected artifacts in the form of essays, research reports, videos, audio recordings, images, and much more.
  • Learning Portfolios are one of the 11 high-impact teaching and learning practices identified by the American Association of Colleges and Universities (AAC&U).

More than a repository

  • Learning portfolios are like a digital scrapbook. While many traditional assignments and assessments create a snapshot of a moment in time, learning portfolios provide an opportunity for storytelling and a holistic understanding of a person's learning experience. Stories told in a portfolio can exceed the boundaries of traditional assignments and assessments. 
  • While learning portfolios can function as a product (an archive of artifacts), their benefits are maximized when portfolios function as a process that supports student learning.

A tool for critical reflection

  • Critical reflection goes beyond describing a student's experience-- it is a thinking and reasoning process that makes meaning of an experience.
  • Learning portfolios allow students to curate reflections that reveal the intersections of their backgrounds, personal identities, and experiences in and out of the classroom.
  • You can learn more in the Guide to Ignatian Critical Reflection.

A tool for assessment and accreditation

  • A learning portfolio can be a powerful tool for assessment and evaluation. By establishing a set of criteria of evidence each student is required to submit, evaluators can measure what concepts students have mastered and where they are falling short.
  • Learning portfolios can be used as formative assessments (throughout students' course of study) or as summative evaluations (at the end of the standard degree program).
  • Portfolio assessment has advantages over other modes of evaluation in that students often have the opportunity to select what they feel is their best representative work. With the ability to include multiple formats, including multimedia, learning portfolios address a variety of learning styles

HOW ARE LEARNING PORTFOLIOS USED?

Loyola University Chicago supports four different types of Learning Portfolios. 

Course Portfolios

  • Typically used in a single course for students to submit assignments, connect course concepts, reflect on their learning, receive peer and instructor feedback, and integrate academic and co-curricular experiences.

Integrative Portfolios

  • Used within an entire major, minor, or academic program for students to connect content across multiple courses, create an interdisciplinary learning experience, integrate beyond-the-classroom experiences, and assess student learning.

Assessment Portfolios

  • Used by instructors to evaluate student learning outcomes, competencies, or skills as defined by a program's standards and/or outcomes. Students upload artifacts that demonstrate attainment of the aforementioned areas.

Professional/Showcase Portfolios 

  • Used by students, faculty and staff to share skills, competencies, or experiences with professional colleagues or prospective employers.
  • Students use the portfolio to track professional growth and make meaning of professional experiences over time.
  • Faculty may consider creating a portfolio to support their promotion and tenure processes.

WHERE CAN I LEARN MORE ABOUT LEARNING PORTFOLIOS?

Here are some great resources related to learning portfolios:

INSTRUCTOR TIPS, TOOLS & TEMPLATES

Here are some tips and tools that will help you make the most of learning portfolios:

  • Start early! Introduce the learning portfolio early in the semester and embed it into your course. 

Contact Us

Contact LUC's Learning Portfolio Program Manager
  • What can the Learning Portfolio Program Manager do for you?
    • Collaborate to find the most effective way for you to use learning portfolios in our program or course.
    • Provide individualized training as you learn how to use Digication.
    • Meet with your students to provide instructions or to answer questions about learning portfolios.
  • Email: learningportfolio@luc.edu 
Reach out to Digication directly

Digication Tutorials

The learning portfolio program at Loyola University Chicago seeks to connect the high-impact practice of learning portfolios (ePortfolios) in the curriculum through experiential learning/engaged learning courses, in order to: 

  1. Enhance teaching and learning strategies for faculty,
  2. Provide integrative learning experiences for students, and
  3. Develop teaching and learning assessment opportunities at the course, program, and institutional level. 

The goal is to make learning holistic, integrative, tangible, and portable for students through an evidence-based demonstration of their learning experiences.

Learning Portfolio Outcomes:
As a result of constructing a learning portfolio, students will be able to:

  1. Integrate learning through critical reflection, to connect and synthesize disciplinary knowledge, out-of-classroom experiences, and lived experiences to generate new understanding.
  2. Identify personal development from new understanding of their own and others’ perspectives.
  3. Articulate a developing identity as a lifelong learner through academic experiences, community-based experiences, co-curricular experiences, and future goals.
  4. Demonstrate critical reflection upon social justice issues and Loyola’s Jesuit mission.

Digication Tutorials