Answer :
Answer:
- A letter to the reader outlining each portfolio item
- A list of term definitions that will be helpful to readers
- A collection of individual goals for the year, selected and updated by students monthly, quarterly, etc.
- Graphics—charts, concept diagrams, timelines, photographs, etc.—showing important data such as test scores
- Book excerpts or quotations chosen by the student
- A chart tracking every free-choice book a student has read that year
- Reading logs
- Photographs of students working
- Anecdotal notes from one-on-one or small group time with students (e.g. guided reading notes)
- Video recordings of readings or performances (for ePortfolios)
- A sample paragraph of writing featuring a few key writing techniques
- Sample essays of various types—descriptive, narrative, explanatory, expository, persuasive, cause and effect, and compare and contrast are all good options
- Technical writing such as a process analysis essay featuring student-drawn diagrams
- Creative writing samples, including stories, poems, songs, and scripts
- A collection of graded math quizzes showing performance trends