Assembly
Getting responses
Consider the rhetorical context of your portfolio as you put it together, and seek responses from reviewers to make sure that you’ve made good choices.
Assembly
For a print portfolio, number all pages in consecutive order, and prepare a table of contents. Label and date each piece of writing if you haven’t done so previously. Put a cover sheet on top with your name and the date; if the portfolio is for a class, include the course title and number. Assemble everything in a folder.
For a digital portfolio, arrange the works in a way that makes sense to you and that allows your readers to find what they are looking for easily. Add any links that seem necessary to help users move from place to place within the portfolio or at external sites—
Back to top
Getting responses
Once you have assembled your portfolio, seek responses to it from several classmates or friends and, if possible, from at least one instructor. (You may want to refer your reviewers to these guidelines on reviewing a draft.) Revise accordingly.
If this portfolio is part of your work in a course, ask your instructor whether a few corrections are acceptable. If you intend to use it as part of a job search, you should make each piece as final, professional, and functional as possible. Either way, the time and effort you spend revising and editing the contents of your portfolio will be time well spent.
Back to top