The portfolio is the single most important part of every architectural student's education. This book proides a complete guide to preparing, compiling and presenting this crucial element of the architecture course. The experienced author team gives practical advice for the creation of the portfolio covering issues of size, storage, layout and order. They go on to guide the student through the various forms a portfolio can take: the Electronic Portfolio, the Academic Portfolio and the Professional Portfolio suggesting different approaches and different media to use in order to create the strongest portfolio possible. The team also presents the best examples from international student portfolios to show the reader their recommendations in practice. The book has a companion website where full colour representations of the best examples of portfolio work can be accessed. Also in the Seriously Useful Guides series: * The Dissertation * The Crit * Practical Experience
Ten simple steps to build portfolio assessment into everyday teaching.
Jack Wilson, a New Directions colleague who lives in Hilton Head, told of greeting a newcomer there. Jack said that when he asked the man what he did for a living, he replied, “I'm a tax adviser much of the time.
Johnson, D. W., & Johnson, R. T. (1994). Preparing teachers to support inclusion: Preservice and ... In P. Belanoff, & M. Dickson (Eds.), Portfolios: Process and product (pp. 101–111). Portsmouth, NH: Baxton, & Court Publishers.
Through a series of creative substitutions, in Portfolio Society Ivan Ascherextends Marx's critical project in bold and unexpected ways.
This book by Carl Barnes presents the first high-quality colour facsimile of a key manuscript of Gothic art and architecture and medieval scientific thought, the 'Portfolio' of Villard de Honnecourt, and gives the first complete ...
Carol Porter and Janell Cleland have been teaching junior high and high school English and reading for over fifteen years. Their six years of collaboration at Mundelein High School have...
Written by agile-mentoring expert Jochen Krebs, this book illuminates the opportunities—and rewards—of applying agile processes to your overall IT portfolio.
They identify the five interlocking mechanisms at the core of the model—planning and oversight, choice, autonomy, human capital, and school supports—and show how these are implemented differently in each city.
Masterfully crafted, exquisitely written, impossible to put down, this is historical fiction of the very first order, and resounding confirmation of Orringer's gifts as a novelist.
Determining the physical , organizational , and conceptual structure of the portfolio , whatever its intended use , is the first step . We have worked with some administrators on the development of electronic portfolios .