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2014

Preparing and Representing a Teaching Portfolio


Teaching Practice
The mediocre teacher tells. The good teacher explains. The superior teacher demonstrates. The great teacher inspiresWilliam Arthur

Rhina Arely Bentez Elmer Jorge Guardado 3/3/2014 Preparing, and presenting a Teaching Portfolio- By: Rhina Benitez

Teaching Portfolio 2 Introduction: This paper contains important information about what a Teaching portfolio is, what it contains, the structure, methodology, teaching objectives, responsibilities, and so on. This is the beginning of the presentations and preparation of the Teaching Portfolio which is one of the most important instruments that a teacher possesses and needs to perform his or her practice in the classroom. Teaching Portfolios are increasingly being used as a means of documenting activity and reflection in the area of teaching practice. This contains a set of artifacts that complement the teachers instrument. A teaching portfolio is becoming the accepted form in which you are expected to demonstrate your commitment to learning and teaching, document your teaching responsibilities, practices and expertise, and provide evidence of your performance as a teacher.

For the preparations and presentation of the portfolio there are things that are important to take into account, and the teacher does not have to skip them. But before we go deeper with this, there are questions about the whole topic like:

1. What is a Teaching Portfolio? 2. What is my self-Evaluation and Reflection? 3. Why do I need a Teaching Portfolio? 4. How should I structure my Teaching Portfolio? 5. What are my Teaching Responsibilities? 6. What is the Statement of my Teaching Philosophy? 7. What are my Teaching Methodology, Strategies, and Objectives?

Preparing, and presenting a Teaching Portfolio- By: Rhina Benitez

Teaching Portfolio 3 1What is a Teaching Portfolio?

A teaching portfolio is a coherent set of material that represents your teaching practice as related to student learning. Teaching practice in its broadest sense extends beyond the obvious activities that go into teaching a course to include all activities that enrich student learning. Teaching portfolios vary considerably depending on their specific purpose, audience, institutional context, and individual needs. Your portfolio would likely include a summary of your teaching experience and responsibilities, a reflective statement of your teaching philosophy and goals, a brief discussion of your teaching methods and strategies, as well as activities undertaken to improve teaching, and a statement of goals and plans for the future. (Heireann Ollscoil, 2004)

A Teaching Portfolio is compound of a set of artifacts that every teach er uses in the teaching process, and without this important tool it cannot be possible to develop a good Teaching Practice, due to this is really important because it includes all of the things that represent the kind of teacher, how prepared he or she is. Portfolios are structured deliberately to highlight particular aspects of teaching and learning they are not exhaustive collections of teaching artifacts and memorabilia. Ideally, a portfolio describes and documents your approach to teaching by combining reflective descriptions with evidence of specific instructional strategies and measures of effectiveness in a way that represents your teaching's intellectual substance and complexity.

How are teaching portfolios useful? As a "product" for decisions (evaluative, summative): To communicate your teaching to potential employer To communicate your teaching to students, colleagues, community As a "process" for development (formative, reflective): To record your teaching experiences over time To provide themes and evidence for your evaluative portfolio

Preparing, and presenting a Teaching Portfolio- By: Rhina Benitez

Teaching Portfolio 4 What goes into a teaching portfolio? Common elements include: Overview of teaching experience and responsibilities Statement of teaching philosophy Description of teaching methods and strategies Discussion of teaching goals: short and longterm Examples of efforts to improve teaching (e.g., teaching workshops attended, experiments in pedagogy and methodology, observations of others teaching) Common appendices Course materials (e.g., syllabi, assignments, activities, handouts, lecture outlines) Examples of student work Student ratings and written comments from course evaluations Peer and supervisor reviews. (Mellanie Kill, 2008)

Teaching Portfolios are necessary in the Teaching Practice, because as it is said in the definition it shows evidences of activities of our teaching performance, and also they have to be improved through the time by changing the way of teaching, and it will depend on the necessity of the students and the purpose of the faculty. Teaching portfolios help to the teachers to understand better what they are doing in the teaching area, it also allows to save background of what We as teachers have been doing in certain time and thought that we can see how much we have been improving, also, there are clarified our principles, goals, responsibilities, philosophy, and the methodology that we use in order to develop a good teaching practice; this is full of useful artifacts that we use in the classroom and they help us to follow a better road in the teaching performance. The purpose of creating a Teaching Portfolio is not just for documenting papers but also for improving teaching through the reflection and analysis.

Preparing, and presenting a Teaching Portfolio- By: Rhina Benitez

Teaching Portfolio 5 2- What is my self-Evaluation and Reflection about Teaching Practice?

All too often staff sees the preparation and presentation of a teaching portfolio as only being necessary for the purpose of applying for new positions, probation or promotion or in terms of applying for teaching grants or awards. A teaching portfolio however can also be seen as providing staff with an opportunity to reflect on their own approaches to and philosophies on learning and teaching and be used as a tool to undertake some self-evaluation of their own teaching practices. (Dr Carolyn Allport, 2005)

The experience that I had in Teaching helped me to realize how important is to take into account a set of things that as teachers allow us to develop the performance of a good teaching in the classroom. Among the things that are necessary to include, and consider during the process of Reflection and Self-Evaluation of the Teaching Practice are for example the number of different methods used in modifications during the lesson, modify method of providing instruction, modify student tasks or assignments, modify grouping arrangement, modify students instructional materials, modify learning objectives, modify method of progress monitoring, modify method of providing enhancement. (Dr Carolyn Allport, 2005) I develop my first teaching experience in Universidad Gerardo Barrios, Usulutn, in 2013, I can say that the experience helped me to realize how hard is this field, and also to know what I was doing good and where I was failing or what I was doing wrong. Self-evaluations and reflections are necessary to do in order to improve our way of teaching. One of the aspects is the Classroom management, in this part teachers need to know how to control the classroom and for doing that there are things involved in it like the right use of methods, techniques, strategies, and resources in the classroom, including the way I speak, walk, and use of gestures; the way I was doing it in those times is not the same way that I have planned for my new experience; in order to manage the classroom there were a lot of activities developed in that time, now it is important to look for new activities that help to build a better methodology, and this will lead students to a better learning. Preparing, and presenting a Teaching Portfolio- By: Rhina Benitez

Teaching Portfolio 6

Another important aspect is the seating arrangement, at the beginning of the course I put my students in orderly rows because they were 25, but at the pass of the days there were less students, I had only 15 of them, so I decided to put them in horse shoe, and sometimes in circles, so they worked better in that way. The seating place is not quite important if the teacher wants to catch students attention because in small groups all of them pay attention in any seat that they are, but in this case I did not want them to be in the same place all the time, sometimes I feel that they needed to move.

Another aspect is Planning which is one of the most important things in the teaching field, and it was hard for me sometimes to prepare a class, I had to think on how should I start, how should I develop a lesson, and how should I end the class, it was a hard job; sometimes I had to improvise because I did not use any lesson plan, what I just did was to prepared the activities for starting a lesson, with warm-up activities to catch students attention, and during the development of the lesson I tried to keep the same attention by using fun activities, and at the end of the class using wrap-up activities, but I was doing it unconsciously because I was not clear about the creation of a lesson plan, I did know about it but I did not do it; I just did things with any order, now I know the importance of creating a lesson plan before every class.

Those things made to reflect on my teaching style, factors on what I was failing, and also made me to realize on the things that I need to improve for my new Teaching experience, and I expect to put all what I have learned into practice this time. My experience in the teaching area also allowed me to learn many things, one of them is that being a teacher is harder than anyone can believe; it requires a lot of interest, patience, knowledge, skills, good attitude, and other things that are very important to take into account. It is a great challenge for every teacher who is committed to making a positive change in each student, how? By creating good methodologies, strategies, and resources; also innovating things in the classroom, so learning English will be interesting for them, and it will becomes effective.

Preparing, and presenting a Teaching Portfolio- By: Rhina Benitez

Teaching Portfolio 7 3Why do I need a Teaching Portfolio?

Teaching portfolios are typically used for two purposes, which sometimes overlap: (1) As a developmental process for reflecting on and improving ones teaching; and (2) As an evaluative product for personnel decisions such as tenure, promotion, or a teaching award. Whatever function they serve, teaching portfolios have several major benefits:

They provide different sources of evidence of teaching performance. As teachers, we have often relied primarily on student evaluations for feedback about our teaching. Although such student reviews contribute important information about teaching performance, they often reflect off-the-cuff feelings expressed in just a few moments at one of the final classes of a semester. The variety of sources of feedback in a portfolio provides a more comprehensive view of how a teacher is handling the diverse responsibilities of teaching. Thus they reflect more of teachings intellectual substance and complexity. They make teaching more visible through their demonstration of a variety of teaching-related activities. They place the initiative for reflecting on and evaluating teaching in the hands of staff. It is the teacher who explains and documents his or her teaching performance by selecting what goes into the portfolio. They give the individual an opportunity to think about his or her own teaching to change priorities or teaching strategies as needed, and to reflect about future teaching goals. Putting together a teaching portfolio in itself often enhances ones teaching performance. They offer opportunities for staff to work collaboratively. Teachers often work with other colleagues or mentors in developing portfolios, thereby opening the door to greater sharing among faculty of their views and approaches to teaching. As teaching becomes more visible and ideas about it are shared, teaching becomes a more valued subject of intellectual and scholarly discussion throughout the institution. (Heireann Ollscoil, 2004)

Preparing, and presenting a Teaching Portfolio- By: Rhina Benitez

Teaching Portfolio 8 Also, a Teaching Portfolio is a useful tool that can help you to

Develop, clarify, and reflect on your teaching philosophy, methods, and approaches Present teaching credentials for hiring and promotion in an academic position Document professional development in teaching, Identify areas for improvement, Prepare for the interview process, (Whashinton University in St. Louis, 2013)

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How should I structure my Teaching Portfolio?

The structure of the teaching portfolio might differ significantly depending upon the purpose for which you intend to use it. In some circumstances the structure of your portfolio might be dictated by institutional policy. You should also structure your portfolio to highlight what you consider to be your relative strengths in teaching and learning. . If you have been heavily involved in scholarship and research into your teaching and used the results to be innovative in the course or curricula design or in the way you prepare materials or deliver your courses you may want to emphasize these aspects. If on the other hand, you have a long tradition of teaching with positive student feedback this is an aspect you may wish to make prominent. (Dr Carolyn Allport, 2005)

There is no correct structure for a teaching portfolio, but most of the literature indicates that it should at least address the following aspects of your teaching: The philosophy on teaching and learning. Documentation for current teaching practices, self-reflection on current practices and plans

for future improvement. Evidence of your performance as a teacher. This would be the most important aspects that a Teaching Portfolio should include because here I can summarize about the purpose of teaching, what I want to achieve, what I believe of learning and teaching, and what I have done, my experience as a teacher are reflected in this document, describing my teaching style and the approach in which I am focused. There are Preparing, and presenting a Teaching Portfolio- By: Rhina Benitez

some other forms to structure a teaching portfolio in which are included other things that are important as well, and make the portfolio more complete by adding aspects besides the ones that I have mentioned before. How exactly you address each of these issues and what weight you assign to each will be very much an individual decision. To help you think about how you go about structuring your teaching portfolio. The institution you teach in might make a difference to the way you compile your teaching portfolio. Firstly, institutional policies and procedures in relation to probation, promotion and performance management might prescribe the form in which your portfolio statement is structured. Secondly, the mission or values of the institution might also influence your teaching philosophy and practice.

In some circumstances, such as applying for promotion, your institution may have restrictions in terms of the length and content of teaching portfolio statements. Some institutions use a standardized pro-forma which staff are expected to follow. Before starting to prepare a teaching portfolio statement, you should first check with the particular institution to determine their policies and procedures in relation to teaching portfolios. Your teaching portfolio should emphasize your own particular philosophy and practice toward teaching, as well as demonstrate that you are aware of the institutions goals and objectives in relation to teaching and learning. Teaching philosophy, teaching practice and the way your teaching is evaluated may well vary considerably between disciplines. Check whether your discipline or teaching area has its own standards, in addition to those articulated by your institution. (Dr Carolyn Allport, 2005)

My Teaching Portfolio is structured in a way in which my purpose is reflected in the area of a better education, which contains some aspects that are so important to take into account. not for the purpose of applying for a job position but focused on show what I want, on what I am committed to do, what I want to achieve for the course, and my beliefs about educating, what my teaching style is, what I want to change, and inside of this, one of things I would like to change is the way in which teachers teach English as a subject instead to teaching it as a Language.

Preparing, and presenting a Teaching Portfolio- By: Rhina Benitez

Teaching Portfolio 10

Here is another option of how to structure a teaching portfolio, including some other aspects that make of this a complete portfolio, which describes important facts that as a teacher should do or add in order to have a better understanding of what we are doing in the classroom. These are the aspect or contents that it should include: Teaching Responsibilities Statement of Teaching Philosophy Teaching Methodology, Strategies, Objectives Description of Course Materials (Syllabi, Handouts, Assignments) Efforts to Improve Teaching Conferences/Workshops Attended Curricular Revisions Innovations in Teaching Student Ratings on Diagnostic Questions Products of Teaching (Evidence of Student Learning) Teaching Goals: Short- and Long-Term Appendices (Dr Carolyn Allport, 2005) 5What are my Teaching Responsibilities?

Responsibilities of the teachers are a compliment of the Teaching Portfolio, and one of the commitments that each of us have with ourselves and with the students, in order to complete the action of teaching, and this gives us a better comprehension of what we should do in order to change minds, and behaviors, also to set a communicative environment in and out of the classroom. By describing your teaching roles and responsibilities, you provide a context for the reader and set the stage for the main points you'll be making about your teaching. (University Of Nebraska -Lincoln, 2014)

Preparing, and presenting a Teaching Portfolio- By: Rhina Benitez

Teaching Portfolio 11 My responsibilities are to effort myself to go further with teaching, to fall in love every day with what I am doing because in that way I am going to do better things and my teaching style will be improving, and growing better. I have to be motivator and the one who inspire students to submit to learn a new language. Also one more responsibility is that I have to be fair with my students at the time to evaluate, to be a good listener and a good guide, also to help them to improve, and correct them when they are going wrong, to involve them in formulating classroom rules, provides easy access to instructional materials, encourages interactions and allows conversations about activities or tasks. With the students: My responsibilities as a teacher are firstly, to motivate students to learn a new language, and to develop linguistic and communicative skills through the use of methods and techniques that are focused on the development of this areas of the language, also to monitor each activity that the students perform in the classroom, and facilitate the learning process by using a good methodology, making use of the principles that represent myself as a good teacher. In the classroom, it is important to encourage values in students, and make them to feel committed on what they are doing. Is my responsibility to guide them and try that they get a meaningful learning. In my previous experience, I realized that there is a large of tasks and situations that a teacher should affront, and deal with both the teaching-learning process and the change in student behavior as well, but I know is my responsibility as a teacher to make them change, make them learn, and make them be a examples for others.

With classroom performance: My responsibilities with the performance in the classroom are to plan before every single class, to prepare a good methodology and innovate each class with new activities but always being focused on the communicative approach, making use of the technology, also using resources that match well with each lesson. It is important that the students feel comfortable in every class, so I have to be creative, make the topics relevant to students and improve things in my teaching style. Also I have to make sure that the methodology that I am using works well with the majority of the students, and the way I evaluate has to be different, not only by assigning written style exams, but most important to make sure that they are developing and improving communicative skills, by using different oral activities. Preparing, and presenting a Teaching Portfolio- By: Rhina Benitez

Teaching Portfolio 12 6- What is the Statement of my Teaching Philosophy? Statement of Teaching Philosophy: A statement of teaching philosophy allows you to articulate what you believe your role and objectives are as a teacher and what learning objectives you set for your students. The statement should highlight how and why you adopt certain approaches to teaching to achieve these objectives. Typically your statement of teaching philosophy should be a brief statement about your views in relation to your assumptions, attitudes and expectations toward your responsibilities and obligations as a teacher and how this impacts on your approach to teaching. It should highlight what you believe to be your strengths as a teacher.

Despite its typical brevity (about 1-2 pages long), this statement is the foundation on which the portfolio is built. Your aim here is to answer in some way one main question: Why do you do what you do as a teacher? Reflections on this question generally include four components, which may be discussed separately or be intertwined in some way (see samples in Appendices E and F): Your beliefs about how student learning in your field occurs. Given those reflections, your beliefs about how you as a teacher can best help students learn. How you put into practice your beliefs about effective teaching and learning. (If you discuss your teaching methods in a separate section, such as the one below, you might simply refer to that section in your philosophy statement.) Your goals for students. (Heireann Ollscoil, 2004) My Teaching philosophy is focused on the practice of principles in order to achieve my goals of a good Teaching Practice in the classroom because I know the importance of the principles to make a good and effective development in the learning process of the students. Also my teaching philosophy is focused on the development, and improvement of communicative skills with the implementation of a methodology that goes right to the needs of the students to learn English not as a subject, but as it actually is, a Language. I believe in students capacity of learning, and also on the skills that each one possesses and which can be developed through the process of Preparing, and presenting a Teaching Portfolio- By: Rhina Benitez

teaching and learning. The importance of practice an active learning, taking into account the different intelligences in the classroom, is my primary tool in order to achieve a meaningful learning by using methods, strategies, techniques and resources that serve as a way to get my objectives and fulfill my responsibilities as a teacher. I see the education as the solution for many issues that human beings have to face. Every day we are learning something new, a teacher does not know everything, even every time we realize that we know almost nothing, and when we stop learning is the day we die. It is important for me to learn new things every single day, and be a means of learning for others, and have the satisfaction of serving as an example and guide to a change in people, because that is what teachers do, change! But, we do good changes. The learning process is not easy, but it is something that last forever and it is of great value because it serves greatly in every area, and it is even better learning a new language which is as if we activate a new sense in our brain and it makes us more sensitive to our surroundings. Why do I teach? Because as I said before, I want to be an inspiration for students, and I also what to share my knowledge and learn from them, it is something that I enjoy a lot. How do I teach? I have my own teaching style; what I like the most is to interact with the students and get along with them, I put into practice the active learning so I know I will achieve my goals by using my methodology which is focused on the development of the communicative skills. What should I teach? I have done my methodology, and strategies and I have set my objectives, so what I teach is what the students need. 7- What are my Teaching Methodology, Strategies, and Objectives? The designing of a good methodology is a great challenge, even though it seems to be easy. According to the MINED the English syllabus for high school is focused on the Communicative Approach, in which would be developed a combination of different methods clearly explained, as such as the role of the teacher and the students in communicative English as a Foreign Language class. So for my TP I will include a set of methods that are related on the development of the communicative competences, also for implementing the development and improvement of the four macro skills. In a class would be good to use interactive methodologies to

Preparing, and presenting a Teaching Portfolio- By: Rhina Benitez

make the active learning work.

A methodology as we know is combinations of methods, principles, techniques, and strategies used in the classroom, in order to achieve an effective learning. Here are the methods that in my opinion, would work very well for the Teaching Practice with students from High School. The Community Language learning, using this method the students will learn how to use English language communicatively with the help of its respective techniques and the strategies that are planned to use in the classroom. Reflection on experience technique is going to be used in the classroom where the students can share how they feel by using English language in and out of classes, a good strategy can be to share experiences, they write in their notebooks some ideas, and then I name students to share with the others their own experience. Another method that I will use is the Communicative Language Teaching, this method will be used with the purpose that the students still developing communicative competences, due to the requirements of the MINED are focused on the communicative approach, this method will be accompanied by a series of techniques that will help to develop it in a better way like the application of the role plays, and the language games. These techniques are followed by some strategies that allow the methodology work effectively, for example, in the role play the students can simulate a conversation pretending to be someone else. And in this way they are practicing the language in an effective way if they follow the instructions correctly. On the other hand, the use of language games can work effectively if the strategies are mixed to apply this technique, but always following the same purpose of the developing of the communicative competences. (Diane Larsen Freeman, 2008) (MINED, 2008)

-The use of the Audio-lingual Method can be very helpful, because it is focused on listening and speaking before than reading and writing; it can be applied by including techniques like the repetition drills for starting, and the strategy to put this technique to work would be that I put a set of words on the white board, so they will repeat them, or I can name someone to read words and the other students will repeat word by word. The other can be chain drills, this technique works in a more interactive way because they talk to each other, and a good strategy to put this in practice would be that I say a sentence for starting and this sentence go student by

Preparing, and presenting a Teaching Portfolio- By: Rhina Benitez

student following the sequence that link with the one that I said, it could change depending on what the students are going to say, but it must to follow a logic order, and in this way they get into a good interaction.

I can Mix Audio-lingual Method with another which I personally think that is one of the most used in English classes, it is the Direct Method, I will use this for the fact that I want my students to use only the target language, which is English Language; I will try to set an English environment from the first class, expecting that it works, so they are going to get into this environment easily. The techniques that I will use for this method are for example the Conversation practice, in which I will use different strategies in order to make them have a conversation, it can be that they make their own conversation or I can give them a made one; they can work in couples or trios, and then they will Practice the conversation in front of the other classmates, another way that would help to make this work is to make discussions; I assign them a topic and they will discuss about, using words that they already know. Also, I think that I can use TPR, in some of my classes, this can be mixed with any other method, the strategy to make this methodology works would be to make the students use kinesthetic learning, and also the listening and oral functions, for example combing repetition drills technique from the Audio-Lingual method followed by the use of Commands from TPR method, the students follow the commands, and at the same time they repeat it.

I consider that the students need more practice of the listening and speaking skills, with my previous experience I can attest that the students learn better in an active way, practicing more speech, so this help them to feel motivated to use the language not only inside the classroom or just because the teacher ask them to do it, but also outside of it in an intrinsic way. The set of methods, strategies, and techniques that I have mentioned, form the methodology that is going to be used in my Teaching Practice, are always focused on the communicative approach which is like a goal for the course, and as a teacher I expect to reach this goal, and make them to develop communicative competences. It is good to mix some methods to make a better teaching style, for example

Communicative Language Teaching matches very well with the Audio Lingual Method for the fact that they share the techniques that work in the same way as the role play technique, and the

Preparing, and presenting a Teaching Portfolio- By: Rhina Benitez

strategies could change depending on the teachers creativity; and the other methods are mingled in the same way, so it becomes into a good methodology, those methods, strategies and techniques that are mentioned are the ones that in my personal opinion are more focused on the development of communicative competences, so that is why I chose them to create my methodology.

It would be really good to add IT in the methodology that will be used during the Teaching Practice, because it is necessary to innovate, so the teaching style change and the students will feel more motivated. There are many different technological sources that can be very helpful to include in the methodology like videos, images, records, and so on. Beside this, one of the thing that every teacher knows is that students love social networks, most in the case of young students, so it would be a great idea to share a class on Facebook or Twitter which are the most common social sites, there we can interact, with forums, make discussions about a topic, and in this way they are also improving their communicative skills not only in the oral way, but also practicing reading and writing. There are also Blogs where I can post documents, and then I can make a forum. Given that communicative competence is the goal of a language classroom, instruction needs to point toward all its components: organizational, pragmatic, strategic, and psychomotor. Communicative goals are best achieved by giving due attention to language use and not just usage, to fluency and not just accuracy, to authentic language and contexts, and to students eventual need to apply classroom learning to previously unrehearsed contexts in the real world. (Brown H. Douglas, 2000) Conclusion: To conclude this little part of the teaching portfolio it is important to stress how necessary is the creation of a single document which allows teachers to make a record of all other documents and artifacts that are necessary and useful in the Teaching Practice, such as what the lesson plans, attendance lists, resources and educational materials, among others, which are helpful both to demonstrate the Teaching performance to make improvements and opt for a better working position, which is something up to the teacher. This kind of documents serves as a mirror for every teacher to improve things, and change those that are not quite necessary, here I can see myself, the way I work and organize things in order to do an effective Teaching Practice. Also this leads me to reach my goals as a teacher, so I can surely know where I am going, and what I want to achieve, and make an effective learning result in my students. Preparing, and presenting a Teaching Portfolio- By: Rhina Benitez

Bibliography Diane Lanser-Freeman. (2008). Techniques and Principles in language teaching. In D. LanserFreeman, Techniques and Principles in language teaching (pp. 111,112,113). Oxford: Oxfod University Press. Dr Carolyn Allport. (2005). National Tertiary Education Industry Union. In G. H. Cathy Rytmeister Macquarie University, Preparing and presenting a teaching portfolio (pp. 3-8). National Tertiary Education Union. Brown H. Douglas. (2000). Teaching by Principles. New York: Pearson Education. Heireann Ollscoil. (2004, January 26). Preparing a Teaching portfolio. Retrieved febrary 27, 2014, from National University of Ireland, Galway: http://www.nuigalway.ie/celt/documents/teachingportfolio.pdf Mellanie Kill. (2008, September 29). Starting you teaching portfolio. Retrieved february 28, 2014, from New Media Writing Studio: http://www.newmedia.tcu.edu/portfolio/workshops/Teaching%20Portfolio.pdf MINED. (2008). English Syllabus for High School Education. El salvador: MINED. University Of Nebraska -Lincoln. (2014). Office Of Graduates Studies. Retrieved march 02, 2014, from University Of Nebraska -Lincoln: http://www.unl.edu/gradstudies/current/teaching/portfolio Whashinton University in St. Louis. (2013). The teaching center. Retrieved february 28, 2014, from Whashinton University in St. Louis: http://teachingcenter.wustl.edu/About/ProgramsforGraduateStudentsandPostdocs/resou rces/Pages/Creating-a-Teaching-Portfolio.aspx

Preparing, and presenting a Teaching Portfolio- By: Rhina Benitez

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