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Editing Your E-Portfolio:

e-Portfolio Editing

Editing and Viewing Modes


The tabs at the top left on the page let you switch among editing and viewing modes.

  • Edit Mode: When you log in and view your portfolio, you first see it in Edit Mode. Edit Mode (the Edit tab) displays all your editing options for adding Sections, Pages
    and Modules (more about those features to follow).
  • Preview Mode: Click the Preview tab to preview your draft changes before you
    publish them to ensure that they are what you want.
  • Published Mode: Click the Published tab to display the published version of your portfolio – what your e-Portfolio visitors see. It does not display anything saved as a draft.


Click the Portfolio Settings tab at the top right to do the following:

  • Change the settings of your e-Portfolio at any time by returning to the page where
    you entered the Title, Web Address, and Permission Settings for your e-Portfolio.
  • Scroll to the bottom of the tab for the options Delete to erase your entire e-Portfolio and Download Your e-Portfolio to copy your E-portfolio to disk



Organizing Your e-Portfolio

Creating Sections and Pages


Before adding content to your e-Portfolio, plan the structure of your e-Portfolio. Also, remember that you can create more than one e-Portfolio with your account, so you do not need to fit all your projects or content into one e-Portfolio.

What sections would best represent the work, information, topics, or achievements that you will present in your e-Portfolio. Within each section, what pages will you need to organize your content. You can modify these sections and pages later, but you need an initial structure to get started.

Adding and Editing Sections


To add or edit your e-Portfolio sections, make sure you are viewing your e-Portfolio in Edit Mode. Then click the Add/Edit tab. To add a new section, click on the Add
Section button at the right on the Add/Edit tab.

In the Section name field, enter the title of the section you are adding, and click the Save button. To add another section, click the Add Section button again..

To add sections with customized Web page addresses or sections that you do not want
to display within the e-Portfolio (Hidden Sections), click the Show Advanced link.

To customize the Web page address of the section you are adding, complete the
displayed Section address.

To hide the section, click the Hide this page check-box.

To return to the page at which you can add sections without customized Web addresses, click the Hide Advanced link.

To edit an existing section, click the icon to the right of that section name at the bottom of the page.

Changing the order of sections


You can change the order of sections by dragging and dropping a section to a new place in the sequence. A red dotted line indicates the area where it may be dropped.

Adding Pages


To add e-Portfolio pages:
1. Make sure the Edit tab is highlighted.
2. In the View Sections area, click the section to which you want to add pages. In
the following example, the section About Me was selected.
3. In the View Pages area, click the Add/Edit tab. To add a new page, click the
Add Page button at the right.
4. Enter the page name, and click the Save button.

To add another new page, click the Add Page button again.

In the preceding sample screen, the pages Education and Interests have been added
and the page Hobbies is ready to be added.

To add sections with customized Web page addresses or sections that you do not want
to display within the e-Portfolio (Hidden Sections), click on the Show Advanced link.

Editing Pages


To edit an existing page, click the icon to the right of the page.

Changing the order and priority of pages
You can change the order of pages by dragging and dropping a page to a new place in
the sequence. You can also create a sub-page by dropping a page in an indented
location, as shown in the preceding sample screen..

Adding and Editing Modules


To add or edit content within your e-Portfolio you must be in Edit Mode. Select a section and a page within your e-Portfolio for which you want to add or edit content. In the following sample screen, the section Courses and the page Art History are selected.

You can use any combination of the following two options to structure the content of your e-Portfolio pages.

The basic building block of structuring a page is a Module. Modules define what kind of content can be added and also the layout of this content within the page. You can add multiple modules to a page for flexibility in how you customize the presentation of your work.

Adding Content to Your e-Portfolio


There are several types of Modules from which to choose:

Image/Video Module
The Image/Video module enables you to display a single large piece of media, such as
a movie or an image.

Rich Text Module
The Rich Text module provides a rich text area that can contain formatted text and
display links, files, and images in-line.

Gallery Module
The Gallery module gives you the flexibility of presenting multiple images on a page, using thumbnails or simple numbering across the page to link to large images. Each image has a rich text caption field as well.

Contact Form Module
For added security and to avoid unsolicited e-mails, the Contact Form module enables
you to be contacted through your e-Portfolio by email without publishing your email
address.

You can choose multiple modules for each page you create. The variety of layouts
enable you to choose ones that will best present your work.

Adding a Module to a Page



To add a module to a page:

  1. Select the module type to add. In the following sample screen, the Image/Video
    module has been selected.
  2. Click Add This Module.
  3. Click Done.


Module Options



After you finish adding a Module of any text or media type by clicking Done, several
buttons and tabs are available as options.

These buttons are at the top of the page:

  • Add A Module: Add another module to the current page.
  • Publish All: Publish any saved media or text modules to your e-Portfolio. This is especially helpful when there are multiple modules on a page.


These tabs are in a row below the buttons:

  • View Media or View Text: Display your saved but not published module content.
  • Edit: Add and edit module content.
  • Publish: Publish a specific module within your e-Portfolio.
  • Delete: Erase the module from the page.
  • Drag to reorder: Rearrange modules on a page.



Need more help?

e-Portfolio Quick Start Guide
e-Portfolio Help Guide
Assessment Management System Help Guide
Courses and Communities Help Guide
Digication Support

mika soma

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I am interested in what’s considered to be normal.
I am interested in walls and how they affect the physical space and mental space.
I am interested in the clothes that my mother tells me that she can’t wear any more because she’s “not young enough.”
I am interested in why I was crying and screaming to the sky to bring my mom and dad to me whenever I got home without the house key and there’s no one in the house.
I am interested in how I become Japanese a lot more in America than in Japan.
I am interested in why for most of my dreams I go back to the oldest house that I lived until I was 11.
I am interested in what you first thought of me before I started reading my list.
I am interested in how the way I look at myself changes every second and still be able to call myself “me.”
I am interested in how the sound that I hear around me makes me feel assured that I actually exist within the space.
I am interested in the silence within a packed commute trains.
I am interested in what people think of me when I look into their eyes when they are passing me on the train or car.
I am interested in what kind of sound it would be if I could hear all the clocks on earth.
I am interested in my happy feelings.
I am interested in what you think of me now that you know a tiny bit more of myself.
I am interested in my dark feelings.
I am interested in what people think of me when I make noise by speaking Japanese, like 私は人間です。よろしく。
I am interested in how I try to understand a thing by looking at the texture of its surface.
I am interested in what is called the “negative space” in between you and me.
I am interested in how I can float on the water but not on clouds.
I am interested in how I used to fear my feet not touching the ground in a pool.
I am interested in how what we can see seems more convincing than things that are invisible.
I am interested in how time passes, or that we think that time only can pass.
I am interested in a melting ice cube that is half ice and half water.
I am interested in how green tea is good for me.
I am interested in why my brother closed himself up in his room for a year after high school and decided to visit me in America and started living here.
I am interested in how my dad tells me to “keep it in mind that the society is mostly made up of people like your mom and your dad” after looking at my art works.
I am interested in why I could not tell my teacher that I needed to go to the bathroom in front of all of my classmates in my first grade.
I am interested in the people who are handing pocket tissues with advertisement on the back to strangers without looking at them in front of a train station in Tokyo.
I am interested in peace signs that Japanese people hold up when they have their photos taken.
I am interested in finding out a way to become popular without becoming famous.
I am interested in trying to figure out how to look at my neck, the back of my head, and my face without a mirror.
I am interested in how my hands began to look like my mom’s that I remember from my childhood.
I am interested in beyond the sunset, where there are people having lunch together, there are people reading newspaper with a cup of coffee listening to the radio, there are people dreaming in the bed.
I am interested in the lock that is on the closet of my brother’s room.
I am interested in edges of things that one plane starts and stops.
I am interested in why I long for things that used to be mundane.
I am interested in how my feeling of belonging can be generated at occasions and places where I once had feeling of isolations and displacement.
I am interested in how my grandparents give me money every time I visit them while they keep telling me that I am too old to get money from them.  
I am interested in how I can only make one tissue flower in one minute by myself, but 5 of them can also be made in one minute if there are 5 people; 50 of them in one minute with 50 people, 500 in one minute with 500 people, 5000 in one minute with 5000 people.
I am interested in what you think of me now that you know a bit more of myself form a minute ago.
I am interested in why my mom’s miso soup tastes the best though I always think that it needs more salt.



mika soma