e-portfolios using Glow blogs at Barr Primary, South Ayrshire
Please note that this cookbook refers to an earlier approach to using Glow for the creation of e-portfolios. The suggested approach for using Glow for creating e-portfolios can now be found here in the National E-Portfolio Glow Group. You will find rationale, how-to documents and help videos.
From the recommendations contained within Building the Curriculum 5 Jennifer Richardson then South Ayrshire’s Curriculum for Excellence Assessment Team Development Officer, had decided to initiate a pilot project to use Glow to help schools meet the requirements. The documentation states that,
“children and young people should agree learning goals and should record them in ways that are meaningful and relevant.”
It also calls for the creation of a Learner Profile which should include targets and goals with information on all areas of the curriculum and wider achievement and a range of evidence of learning. It states that learners should have opportunities for reflection, sharing and dialogue. Maintaining an electronic portfolio within Glow could provide schools and pupils with the ongoing information required for a Profile.
In this cookbook we will focus on work done in Barr Primary School in South Ayrshire as part of this pilot process.
Originally South Ayrshire were interested in some work done in East Ayrshire using Glow Groups as e-portfolios. However, since their introduction in the summer of 2010, Glow blogs have become an increasingly important tool within Glow. It quickly became obvious that they would be an excellent opportunity to provide an e-portfolio solution which would have many advantages over using a Glow Group.
Jennifer was originally keen to go ahead with using Glow blogs for this purpose as she saw the following benefits:
- they provide an accessible, electronic and manageable method of storing different types of evidence in one central place
- it can be accessed by both the learner, teachers, parents and peers (optional)
- learners can independently access and update their e-portfolio at any time and from anywhere with an internet connection
- teachers, parents and peers could comment on the learners work
- the e-portfolio can automatically transfer with the learner from class to class and from primary to secondary school.
National advice and access to templates and helpsheets is available from the National level Glow Group here. The advice is given that the e-portfolios are created in a Glow Group in the pupil’s My Glow area. The My Glow area is chosen so that the pupils can have more ownership of the process but also because as the pupil moves to secondary school, if they are correctly identity matched to the same account, then they retain their My Glow and any groups within it. Rather than simply creating the blog on their My Glow it is created in a Glow Group so that membership can be set for teachers in the Glow Group without giving access to the pupil’s My Glow area. When a pupil enters secondary school membership can be reset for all teaching staff for the secondary in the way it was originally set at the primary.
Context
In South Ayrshire we decided to build a template for schools to use, although local authorities are now able to work with the National Team to design a ‘Theme’ which can be used across the whole authority. Towards the end of 2010 South Ayrshire asked for volunteer schools to come along to a twilight training session. Both primaries and secondaries were keen to be involved. Fraser Baird came along from Barr Primary to find out how to get started with his pupils and kicked the process off with them when he returned to school.
Barr Primary were initially keen to use Glow Groups for e-portfolios and had already got started with doing this but then opted to give the Glow blogs a try instead. They began with creating them with the senior pupils in P5-7 but then set them up with the junior pupils as well. All pupils in P1-7 at Barr Primary have their own Glow blog to use for an e-portfolio.
To put the project in context click below to see Brian from Barr Primary take you on a tour through his e-portfolio blog:
Ingredients
The prcess the South Ayrshire schools went through to create the e-portfolios was as follows:
- Pupils created a Glow Group with their own name as a title in their My Glow Area using the Glow Light interface.
- They added this Glow Group to their favourites.
- The pupils used the Advanced Settings link to add staff as Administrators of their Glow Group.
- They added the Glow Blog web part to the Glow Group
- They created a Glow blog, naming it with their Glow username, in order to keep the blog name unique.
- The pupils applied a template to their blog but this would now be done by adding a theme decided on by the local authority
- The pupils created their own header for the blog.
- A Glow Group was created by their teacher at school level.
- Pupils copied the URL for their blog and added this to a web links web part in the school-level Glow Group.
Recipe
If you go to the National E-Portfolio Glow Group mentioned above you will see videos and Helpsheets taking you through all the stages required for schools to set up e-portfolio with their pupils.
Brian shows us how pupils access their e-portfolios to make a post (1:22)
Brian shows us how to move from the dashboard to the e-portfolio (0:20)
Impact
Barr Primary are very pleased with how the e-portfolio pilot is progressing and the pupils appear to really enjoy this way of working. They were generous enough with their time to let me go into the school and film their opinions on using their e-portfolios. Click on the videos in the sections below to find out what firstly, the pupils thought of various aspects and then what their teacher, Fraser Baird thought:
Introductions to the pupils (0:39)
The pupils on creating the e-portfolios (0:51)
Pupils on why they’re using the e-portfolios (1:37)
Pupils on what they post on (2:04)
Pupils on using your blog as an evidence store (1:05)
Pupils on how to post (1:37)
Pupils on using vokis on the blogs (0:52)
Pupils on using it from home (0:30)
Pupils on getting comments from teachers (0:32)
Fraser on the decision to use blogs (1:13)
Fraser on getting started (1:27)
Fraser on e-portfolio for measuring pupil progression (1:09)
Fraser on the advantages of blogs over traditional methods (0:49)
Fraser on the pupils and blogs (2:21)
Fraser on what and how often the pupils post (1:05)







October 28, 2011 - 7:39 pm
I have found this as an excellent cookie that has saved me a lot of work with clear guidelines to follow. As a secondary school we are taking each section a step at a time and are looking forward to blogging. Thank you for sharing your experiences.
Mrs McIntosh RE Teacher Queen Margaret Academy Ayr