Portfolios and Personal Development Plans

2009 ◽  
Vol 2 (9) ◽  
pp. 552-562 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alice Shiner

The ePortfolio—love it or loathe it—is an integral part of the workplace-based assessment, it is now a fact of life for general practice trainees. It is also preparation for the appraisal system for qualified GPs, which is heavily reliant upon portfolios of evidence and the creation of personal development plans (or PDPs). Such reliance is only likely to increase with the proposed new revalidation system, which is currently expected to be introduced in 2010–11. Given this context, it is wise for GP trainees to learn how to use these tools to best effect, not only to provide robust evidence of good practice but also to aid personal development. This article aims to describe the way in which PDPs and portfolios can be best employed during your years as a trainee, equipping you with useful skills for a career in general practice. Although the use of tools such as significant event analysis, audit and the consultation observation tool (COT) and case-based discussion, assessments are all important reflective components of the ePortfolio, they will not be discussed in depth in this article.

2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Javier Melero ◽  
Davinia Hernandez-Leo ◽  
Ernesto Arroyo ◽  
Albert Aguilar ◽  
Josep Blat

2013 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 220-223
Author(s):  
Santosh Patel ◽  
Gareth Kitchen ◽  
Janet Barrie

2020 ◽  
pp. 203-207
Author(s):  
Jonathan Passmore ◽  
Tracy Sinclair

Spatium ◽  
2011 ◽  
pp. 9-15
Author(s):  
Branislav Djordjevic ◽  
Tina Dasic

Reasons why water storage reservoirs are necessary in accordance with the sustainable development strategy are described in the paper. The main positive and negative impacts of reservoirs on the environment are analyzed. The most important are: the improvement of hydrological regimes (decreasing maximal and increasing minimal flows), the creation of optimal water management, utilization and protection of water, and the creation of better conditions for river and coastal ecosystems. Negative impacts and measures for its mitigation or elimination are also analyzed. The conclusion is that water storage reservoirs can be harmoniously incorporated into the environment. Serbia has a limited number of locations suitable for the construction of reservoirs, therefore it is necessary to retain these areas for storage in regional development plans and other legal acts.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrzej Kielian

In a time of profound cultural change, Catholic Religious Education (CRE) is challenged to find new ways of engaging with young people. Whilst theoretical reflection is important, it is critical to disseminate good practice in didactics and in preparing textbooks for students. These two go together alongside as an effective work with didactic material entails a good teachers’ preparation. The aim of this book is to present the significance of good religious education in the creation of new social references in the global dimension. The community-building capital of the interactive media is potential that should be made use of in religious education in schools. After all, digital culture is an important “theological place” (locus theologicus). Thus, both the didactics of religious education and broadly understood theological thinking are necessarily confronted with the global culture flows that despite their ambivalence are an opportunity to make theology as well as its transmission in schools more universal, that is catholic, to a larger degree. This “new catholicity” that is achieved thanks to digital communication can effectively lead to the updating of the theological vision of the Church as well as the initiation of new forms of intercultural and interreligious dialogue. This work is analytical-synthetic in nature. The first chapter consists of a general description of the cultural and social changes brought about by technological discoveries in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. This analysis strives to search for an answer to the question about the causes of the change of surrounding in which pupils who are subject to new educational contexts grow up. Meanwhile, the second chapter presents selected elements of digital culture that generate the need for new CRE didactics. The new didactics must be multisensory and intermedial, that is, it must combine various means of expression, such as dance theater, performance, happening, or the use of Internet folklore (netlore) artifacts, especially Internet memes and artmemes on various religious issues, that are created and remixed by the students. The use of such methods in didactic work leads to the translation of the code of religious (theological) language to a more comprehensible and easily assimilated linguistic code of digital culture. The theory of the active search for information by the pupil directed by the teacher that has been elaborated by Richard E. Mayer is the recurring thought in the reflections on didactics. Finally, the last chapter contains a discussion on the adequate model of the textbook: digital or analog. An example of the creation of a religion textbook for a representative of digital culture is the pilot project of the Krakow group of authors of CRE textbooks. It can be called an open source expert model. This consists of a group of experienced teachers (catechists) writing the essential contents of the textbooks. Next, these contents are verified by selected pupils and parents. Only later are the contents proofread, analyzed with respect to their theological accuracy, and, finally, reviewed by valuers of CRE textbooks of the Commission for Catholic Education of the Polish Episcopal Conference. The involvement of students who verify the language used in textbooks and assess the activities and tasks proposed in various exercises, that should take into account multisource and multisensory approach, is an essential element of the new way of developing CRE textbooks. This book is to serve as a forum for discussion on determining topics related to the future of religious education amidst digital culture surroundings and undertaking further research on means of transitioning from the theory of the CRE didactics to living practice in the classroom.


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