This piece was written by Norman Allen, and first appeared in the March 2017 Council Chronicle.
The use of portfolios to assess composition skills in community college English programs has waxed and waned over the last three decades.
For many instructors, portfolios provide a complex portrait of a student鈥檚 growth and ability. For others, the emphasis on process over product blurs the clarity necessary to identify a student鈥檚 ability to move forward in the curriculum.
While practices vary across campuses, most portfolios consist of a small collection of written work, often in multiple drafts and across multiple genres. A final reflective essay puts the emphasis firmly on growth and on self-assessment.
Bringing Clarity to the Writing Process
For Howard Tinberg, professor of English at Bristol Community College, Massachusetts, that reflective piece is key to the process. 鈥淚t can be a cover letter or commentary on how the writing has changed,鈥 he explains. 鈥淚t gets the student to be self-conscious about their writing habits and about their strengths and weaknesses.鈥
Of equal importance is fluency across genres. 鈥淚t might be a proposal to solve a community problem, or a letter to the editor, a review of some kind, or an analysis of cause and effect,鈥 says Tinberg.
In each case, the student chooses the work that will represent their growth as a writer. Success thus depends on learning to recognize strong writing from weak.
鈥淭here has to be a lot of modeling, sharing of works in process, and conducting workshops where students critique each other鈥檚 work,鈥 Tinberg says.
鈥淭hey have to ask, 鈥榃hat makes writing work? When is the writing not working?鈥欌
Along the way, students draw on detailed rubrics and learn to use the language of composition and of critique. Tinberg hopes his approach brings clarity to the writing process. 鈥淪tudents arrive with a sense that writing is mysterious and subjective,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e want to change that.”
Self-Examination and Reporting听
Miles McCrimmon, director of Advance College Academies and former professor of English, speaks highly of the value of portfolios.
鈥淚 fell in love with the idea of deferring judgment about a student鈥檚 performance to as late as possible in the semester,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 especially important at a community college because of the diversity of skill sets we see at the beginning of the year.鈥
McCrimmon has high praise for the innovations made by Edward M. White, who developed what is known as Phase II of portfolio assessment.

鈥淲hite puts the emphasis on the reflective letter, which had to show actual changes in the writing, using examples, using artifacts,鈥 McCrimmon says. 鈥淚nstead of getting general hyperbole about how the course changed the student鈥檚 life, you start getting evidence of where the student met the course outcomes鈥攁nd it鈥檚 the students who are identifying that.鈥
For McCrimmon, that process of self-examination and reporting is an important transferable skill. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e essentially training them to move into the adult world of self-promotion, or of the annual review where you鈥檙e asked to provide evidence of the stuff you鈥檝e done. It鈥檚 much more a pre-professional genre.鈥
The notion of transfer across genres and settings is key to Tinberg鈥檚 approach as well. 鈥淲e鈥檙e talking about a student鈥檚 ability to take key concepts and carry them to other writing situations and other places where writing is required,鈥 he says.
鈥淐an students call on what they acquired in a basic composition class and say, 鈥榃hat does my boss need? What does he really want me to do here? What genre do I write in?鈥欌
Tinberg notes that writing skills have become essential in both professional and personal settings.
鈥淲e live in an environment where we鈥檙e saturated with words,鈥 he says. 鈥淗ow do we help our students see that writing outside of school is connected with writing inside of school?鈥
Challenges vs. Benefits
Despite the potential benefits, the challenges of portfolio assessment can be daunting to instructors and students. Annemarie Hamlin, associate professor of English and chair of humanities at Central Oregon Community College, and her colleagues worked with portfolios in several classes but ultimately reject them as a departmental mandate.
鈥淸Portfolios] were originally seen as a welcome alternative to the high-stakes, timed final exam,鈥 she explains. 鈥淭here were some people who thought, 鈥榊es, this is a way to determine if a student is actually ready to complete this class.鈥
The tension between pedagogical styles was especially keen during portfolio review. Like most departments using portfolios, Hamlin鈥檚 employed a shared review process in which instructors provide a “second opinion” on work from students they don’t know. It raises the stakes for students, and promises a more accurate assessment, since second readers are unaware of such variables as a student鈥檚 classroom attitude or homework record.
鈥淥ur review process was unwieldy,鈥 Hamlin admits. 鈥淚t was a full day of reading, and of reading multiple portfolios. It also raised inevitable tensions between people with different values and different grading practices. Teachers were saying, 鈥榊ou鈥檇 give that an A? I鈥檇 give it a C.鈥 Those tensions didn鈥檛 bode well for a long-standing program.鈥
Developmental composition faculty at Howard Community College, Maryland, adopted portfolio assessments just this fall. Previously a final, timed essay was given a second reading but full portfolios were not in use.
鈥淲hat we got [in that final essay] was a single snapshot of whether a student had mastered all the course outcomes,鈥 Associate Dean Jeremy O鈥橰ourke explains. 鈥淏ut it wasn鈥檛 a holistic look at the course and at the student鈥檚 work. We鈥檙e trying to move away from a rushed and mostly artificial experience that doesn鈥檛 reflect the sense of process that should actually occur during writing.鈥
As with most portfolio assessments, the final essay will both reflect new skills and employ them. 鈥淪tudents will quote their own work,鈥 O鈥橰ourke says. 鈥淭hey鈥檒l refer to their writing as evidence.鈥
Second readers will continue to assess final essays in a process that brings the faculty together for an efficient two and a half hours. 鈥淚 like the group process because it builds a culture,鈥
O鈥橰ourke say. 鈥淚t makes the learning objectives a living document. We have to ask, 鈥榃hat do they mean? How do we interpret them?鈥 It keeps the conversation going.鈥

It also helps relieve the instructor鈥檚 anxiety about serving as gatekeeper to advanced classes and opportunities. 鈥淭hat anxiety is especially present in developmental education,鈥 O鈥橰ourke says. 鈥淭his gives teachers assurance that there鈥檚 at least one evidence of mastery that鈥檚 been validated. They walk out of that group meeting glad they did it.鈥 He adds with a laugh, 鈥淭hough they鈥檙e rarely looking forward to it.鈥
Transferability is a high priority. 鈥淲e鈥檙e moving away from courses that are skills based to courses that explore the kind of thinking that students will need in future course work,鈥 O鈥橰ourke says. Metacognition has a particularly high value. 鈥淪tudents need to think about their thinking,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd we need to think about how to teach reflection and metacognition.鈥
He sees the curriculum moving away from teaching essay patterns and focusing more on purpose and process. 鈥淭he deeper stuff is what transfers鈥 he says, acknowledging that it鈥檚 hard for teachers to let go of long-held practices.
鈥淚 struggle with that on a daily basis myself. I know that students would latch on very easily to this pattern I鈥檝e constructed for them, but I need to let go of that and let them struggle to make their own choices.鈥
Higher Stakes at Community Colleges听
Tinberg finds that new pedagogical models are particularly challenging for community colleges. 鈥淚solation is a real concern, because of the work load,鈥 he says. The typically high numbers of adjunct instructors means that large portions of the faculty aren鈥檛 always available for department meetings or professional development.
A similar challenge faces students who are balancing school with work schedules and adult responsibilities. The emphasis on revision can be especially daunting. 鈥淪tudents in my classes have to write three drafts,鈥 Tinberg says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 quite a shock.鈥
The potential benefits, though, are far-reaching. Tinberg is currently exploring the connections to be made between composition and career-specific concentrations, such as Nursing and Criminal Justice. 鈥淚鈥檇 like to get non-English faculty on board who would help us understand what their students need from a comp class,鈥 he says.
Next steps include gathering data to prove the efficacy of transfer-focused pedagogy. 鈥淜athi Yancey, [Professor of English and Distinguished Research Professor] at Florida State, is working on this,鈥 Tinberg says.
鈥淭he hope is to track transfer over a year at least. It means interviewing students throughout the semester and then following them the following semester, and perhaps following a semester beyond that. It鈥檚 longitudinal work.鈥
Driving the work is an acute awareness of its importance.
鈥淭he stakes are higher in community college,鈥 Tinberg says.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 the bottom line. Is the community college giving its students what they need to persist deeper into the curriculum, either at the community college or at a four-year college or in the work place? It all depends on the individual department, the individual college, but it is possible to move the needle forward.鈥
Norman Allen is a freelance writer and playwright based in Washington, DC. His essays and commentary have appeared in the听Washington Post听and in听Smithsonian听补苍诲听Yes听magazines. Follow him on Twitter: .听