Abstract

While portfolios have seen an unprecedented surge in popularity, they have also become the subject of controversy: learners often perceive little gain from writing reflections as part of their portfolios; scholars question the ethics of such obligatory reflection; and students, residents, teachers and scholars alike condemn the bureaucracy surrounding portfolio implementation in competency-based education. It could be argued that mass adoption without careful attention to purpose and format may well jeopardize portfolios’ viability in health sciences education. This paper explores this proposition by addressing the following three main questions: (1) Why do portfolios meet with such resistance from students and teachers, while educators love them?; (2) Is it ethical to require students to reflect and then grade their reflections?; (3) Does competency-based education empower or hamper the learner during workplace-based learning? Twenty-five years of portfolio reveal a clear story: without mentoring, portfolios have no future and are nothing short of bureaucratic hurdles in our competency-based education programs. Moreover, comprehensiveportfolios, which are integrated into the curriculum and much more diverse in content than reflective portfolios, can serve as meaningful patient charts, providing doctor and patient with useful information to discuss well-being and treatment. In this sense, portfolios are also learner charts that comprehensively document progress in a learning trajectory which is lubricated by meaningful dialogue between learner and mentor in a trusting relationship to foster learning. If we are able to make such comprehensive and meaningful use of portfolios, then, yes, portfolios do have a bright future in medical education.

Highlights

  • While portfolios have seen an unprecedented surge in popularity, they have become the subject of controversy: learners often perceive little gain from writing reflections as part of their portfolios; scholars question the ethics of such obligatory reflection; and students, residents, teachers and scholars alike condemn the bureaucracy surrounding portfolio implementation in competency-based education

  • 1 Department of Educational Development & Research, Faculty of Health Medicine and Life Sciences, Maastricht University, Maastricht, The Netherlands. It was at the turn of the millennium that I changed from law school and knowledge testing to med school and use of portfolios

  • In my faculty portfolios have had an erratic life: they swiftly blossomed during the infant years, changed and partly disappeared during adolescence, to mature and become the central learning and assessment instrument in our longitudinal integrated clerkships and assessment programs

Read more

Summary

Different variations of a portfolio

What do you see when you envision a portfolio? This question will most probably elicit different answers from a student in Buenos Aires, a general practitioner in Leeds or a resident in Ottawa. Portfolios differ so much in their form and use that it is almost impossible to make general statements about them. Despite their many variations, we can distinguish two overarching types, the reflective portfolio and the comprehensive portfolio (Roberts et al 2014). It is for comprehensive portfolios that I do see potential, I am less convinced of the viability of reflective portfolios. Before delving into the whys and wherefores of these statements, I will first elucidate both variations

Reflective portfolios
Comprehensive portfolios
Public relations
Kafka at the hospital
Food for thought
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.