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Mahara ePortfolios: Beginner's Guide

You're reading from   Mahara ePortfolios: Beginner's Guide Create your own ePortfolio and communities of interest within an educational and professional organization with this book and ebook

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2012
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849517768
Length 328 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Mahara ePortfolios Beginner's Guide
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
1. www.PacktPub.com
2. Preface
1. What can Mahara do for you? FREE CHAPTER 2. Getting Started with Mahara 3. Create and Collect Content 4. Organize and Showcase your Portfolio 5. Share and Network in Groups 6. Course Groups and Other Roles in Mahara 7. Mahara Extensions Mahara Implementation Pre-Planner Installing Mahara Pop quiz — Answers

Evaluation and Continuation


Once your platform is running, it's tempting to sit back, but you will need to think about what you are going to do next to ensure its continual development and sustainability.

Reviewing and re-evaluating

This is one of those things that is much easier said than done. It can be really hard to step back and take an honest, critical look at a platform that is in place.

Here are some questions you could be asking:

  • Are the people you need to be recording or linking to their knowledge in Mahara actually recording and linking to their knowledge in Mahara? If not, why not? How can you make it happen?

  • Is Mahara helping learners to achieve their qualifications? Is Mahara helping people to do their work?

  • Can you offer targeted support for groups who have been slow to engage?

  • Does everything really have to be digital?

  • Are people actually identifying and meeting their learning, career, and personal goals?

  • Is learning over Mahara ever being delivered more effectively through other online or offline approaches?

  • Are there variations in success between different types of learners? Are there any good reasons for the variations? How should you respond to these variations?

  • Do the groups, forums, or learning program briefs always match the aspirations and needs of the learners?

  • Could you yourself set performance improvement targets based on metrics gathered from the sorts of questions that you have just asked?

  • Are achievement targets set for all courses at all levels?

  • Is Mahara participation a requirement? Should it be a requirement? Should you set participation targets or might that have a negative effect?

  • If any targets are set, is everyone made aware of those targets? How? How effectively?

  • Are staff or users themselves involved in the target setting?

  • How do you communicate progress against targets? Simple graphical displays?

  • How do you celebrate and reward individual successes and collective progress against targets?

  • Are targets revised frequently enough? By whom? How ambitiously?

  • Do you care about all these targets? Wouldn't it be best to leave the whole Mahara to grow ad hoc?

Changing and embedding

How are you going to make your Mahara ePortfolio site stick as one of the cornerstones of your learning delivery model? Or has it all been a flash in the pan?

A thriving site will often be in a constant state of flux, changing with the needs, and focuses of the organization and its people, embedding itself deeper and deeper as an element of the wider e-institution.

There are various ways in which you might have approached the change-management process required to implement Mahara usage in your organization.

Some organizations might take a very top-down, directive sort of approach. The wisest amongst those avoid horrific staff rebellion by putting their weight behind an expert who is brought in to make the change happen. This expert is often a consultant, sometimes a new staff member. The expert will follow a strict project plan and will have the authority to reward and rebuke as deemed appropriate by the implementation planners.

Other organizations might adopt a more bottom-up user-driven sort of approach. They implement the platform, publicize it, and then just wait to see what happens. The problem here is that it can result in pretty much nothing getting done. It is therefore best in this approach to encourage a knowledge-sharing culture. You could, for example, give the users dedicated time to show off their work and share their skills. This nudges progress along a bit without having to bring in an expert because the users are learning from each other.

In our view, an approach that sits in the middle of these two positions is a negotiated, circular approach, which clearly communicates the organizational drivers, but also gives ample space for the user community themselves to take the lead on what their learning content should cover. The Mahara platform itself, of course, allows nicely for this approach.

If you really want to change your learning and knowledge culture into a reflective, online ePortfolio supported learning and knowledge culture, you will probably have to continuously re-evaluate to what extent you wish to embed Mahara use into your organizational policies. Here are the key questions:

  • Is Mahara usage going to be integral to your business development plan (this is the information age after all, and your country may even be a knowledge-based economy like the UK and USA)?

  • Will Mahara usage be integral to your organizational policies and procedures?

  • Will staff responsibilities for Mahara usage and management be a defined and renumerated element of their job description? Or would you prefer to leave Mahara to be a self-managing phenomenon?

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