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Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum: A Guide for Students and Teachers
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Introduction: What Do You Want to Create Today?
Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum
Adobe Creative Cloud: What Is It? How Does It Work?
Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum
Images: Photographs, Illustrations, Graphics
Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, Spark Post
Print: Magazines, Books, Documents, Resumes
Adobe InDesign, Acrobat
Audiovisual: Video, Film, Animation
Adobe Premiere Pro, Audition, After Effects, Premiere Clip, and Spark Video
Sound: Podcast, Soundtrack, Voice-over, Music
Adobe Audition, Premiere Pro
Webs: Website, Mobile App, ebook
Adobe Muse, Dreamweaver, Spark Page, XD, InDesign
Presentation: Speech, Lecture, Talk, Pitch
Adobe Spark Page, InDesign
Todd Taylor
040585dacbb7e1caa116d4fd9bc26ee5feb34450
Portfolio: Showcase, Dossier, Collection
1 media/ADO_Webjpg_Dreamweaver.jpg 2017-07-17T18:59:29-07:00 Todd Taylor 040585dacbb7e1caa116d4fd9bc26ee5feb34450 20164 15 Adobe Portfolio and Behance image_header 480595 2017-08-31T21:20:36-07:00 Todd Taylor 040585dacbb7e1caa116d4fd9bc26ee5feb34450Page
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| title | dcterms:title | Portfolio: Showcase, Dossier, Collection |
| description | dcterms:description | Adobe Portfolio and Behance |
| content | sioc:content | 9A: Why Make an Online Portfolio?The better question is probably "Why not make an online portfolio of your work?" At this point, in the final chapter in Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum, you’re likely to have produced some pretty cool things, including images, sounds, videos, presentations, and perhaps even interactive media. You've worked hard, and you should be proud of your accomplishments — so, how can you share your digital productions with the world, especially future employers, clients, and mentors?Creative Cloud has two fantastic options for creating an online collection of your best work: Portfolio and Behance. Portfolio and Behance are actually two limbs on the same tree, which is Creative Cloud. They work best together, although you could use them independently. And they connect seamlessly with all of the things you build and store in Creative Cloud. But, before we get to the practical aspects of an online portfolio, let's first consider for a minute the nature of a portfolio, or a (pre)professional collection of your best work. When and why should you choose to make a portfolio? And, thus, how should you go about planning, making, and editing a portfolio using Creative Cloud? On the one hand, portfolios, dossiers, and resumes been used across history for so many different purposes, by so many different people, and in so many different contexts that it’s impossible to say “what they really are” or “how they really work” once and for all. On the other hand, portfolios have been used in some widely consistent ways, namely: to demonstrate one's abilities and to reflect on and better understand the nature of one's work. The first idea above, to demonstrate what you can do, is obvious. But the second purpose, to help you better understand yourself and your work, is not as obvious but potentially just as powerful. The power of (re)collection By definition, a portfolio is a particularly effective way to collect and showcase examples of your best work. When you make something cool and powerful with Creative Cloud, you want to share it. So, on the one hand, Portfolio and Behance make it easy for you to collect your best work in Creative Cloud and share it with the world — and the primary audience for your portfolio is certainly employers, clients, collaborators, and mentors. On the other hand, you are a not-so-secondary audience for your own portfolio. If the outside world is the audience for your portfolio as a collection of your work, then you are the audience for your portfolio as a recollection of your work. Your portfolio is an external projection of your talent, but it’s also an internal reflection of your development. Educational researchers continue to discover the benefits of "metacognitive reflection," which is a fancy way of saying that you learn a great deal by taking a moment to think back on not only what you learned and accomplished but also how you learned it and why you did so in the first place. Telling your story through an online portfolio This chapter helps you figure out how to use an online portfolio to tell your story to others, as well as to help you shape that story for yourself in the first place. Thus, Chapter Nine describes using Portfolio and Behance as both a kind of resume/showcase as well as a journal/diary to reflect on your development. In other words, portfolios are most powerful when they help you look back so that you can move forward. |
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| content | sioc:content | 9A: Why Make an Online Portfolio?The better question is probably "Why not make an online portfolio of your work?" At this point, in the final chapter in Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum, you are likely to have produced some pretty cool things, including images, sounds, videos, presentations, and perhaps even interactive media. You've worked hard, and you should be proud of your accomplishments -- so, how can you share your digital productions with the world, especially future employers, clients, and mentors?Adobe Creative Cloud has two fantastic options for creating an online collection of your best work: Portfolio and Behance. Portfolio and Behance are actually two limbs on the same tree, which is Creative Cloud. They work best together, although you could use them independently. And they connect seamlessly with all of the things you build and store in Creative Cloud. But, before we get to the practical aspects of an online portfolio, let's first consider for a minute the nature of a portfolio, or a (pre)professional collection of your best work. When and why should you choose to make a portfolio? And, thus, how should you go about planning, making, and editing a portfolio using Creative Cloud? On the one hand, portfolios, dossiers, and resumes been used across history for so many different purposes, by so many different people, and in so many different contexts that it is impossible to say “what they really are” or “how they really work” once and for all. On the other hand, portfolios have been used in some widely consistent ways, namely: to demonstrate one's abilities and to reflect on and better understand the nature of one's work The first idea above, to demonstrate what you can do, is obvious. But the second purpose, to help you better understand yourself and your work, is not as obvious but potentially just as powerful. The power of (re)collection By definition, a portfolio is a particularly effective way to collect and showcase examples of your best work. When you make something cool and powerful with Adobe Creative Cloud, you want to share it. So, on the one hand, Portfolio and Behance make it easy for you to collect your best work in Creative Cloud and share it with the world -- the primary audience for your portfolio is certainly employers, clients, collaborators, and mentors. On the other hand, you are a not-so-secondary audience for your own portfolio. If the outside world is the audience for your portfolio as a collection of your work, then you are the audience for your portfolio as a recollection of your work. Your portfolio is an external projection of your talent, but it is also an internal reflection of your development. Educational researchers continue to discover the benefits of "metacognitive reflection," which is a fancy way of saying that you learn a great deal by taking a moment to think back on not only what you learned and accomplished but also how you learned it and why you did so in the first place. Telling your story through an online portfolio This chapter helps you figure out how to use an online portfolio to tell your story to others, as well as to help you shape that story for yourself in the first place. Thus, Chapter Nine describes using Adobe Portfolio and Behance as both a kind of resume/showcase as well as a journal/diary to reflect on your development. In other words, portfolios are most powerful when they help you look back so that you can move forward. |
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| content | sioc:content | 9A: Why Make an Online Portfolio?The better question is probably "Why not make an online portfolio of your work?" At this point, in the final chapter in Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum, you are likely to have produced some pretty cool things, including images, sounds, videos, presentations, and perhaps even interactive media. You've worked hard, and you should be proud of your accomplishments -- so, how can you share your digital productions with the world, especially future employers, clients, and mentors?Adobe Creative Cloud has two fantastic options for creating an online collection of your best work: Portfolio and Behance. Portfolio and Behance are actually two limbs on the same tree, which is Creative Cloud. They work best together, although you could use them independently. And they connect seamlessly with all of the things you build and store in Creative Cloud. But, before we get to the practical aspects of an online portfolio, let's first consider for a minute the nature of a portfolio, or a (pre)professional collection of your best work. When and why should you choose to make a portfolio? And, thus, how should you go about planning, making, and editing a portfolio using Creative Cloud? On the one hand, portfolios, dossiers, and resumes been used across history for so many different purposes, by so many different people, and in so many different contexts that it is impossible to say “what they really are” or “how they really work” once and for all. On the other hand, portfolios have been used in some widely consistent ways, namely: to demonstrate one's abilities and to reflect on and better understand the nature of one's work The first idea above, to demonstrate what you can do, is obvious. But the second purpose, to help you better understand yourself and your work, is not as obvious but potentially just as powerful. The power of (re)collection By definition, a portfolio is a particularly effective way to collect and showcase examples of your best work. When you make something cool and powerful with Adobe Creative Cloud, you want to share it. So, on the one hand, Portfolio and Behance make it easy for you to collect your best work in Creative Cloud and share it with the world -- the primary audience for your portfolio is certainly employers, clients, collaborators, and mentors. On the other hand, you are a not-so-secondary audience for your own portfolio. If the outside world is the audience for your portfolio as a collection of your work, then you are the audience for your portfolio as a recollection of your work. Your portfolio is an external projection of your talent, but it is also an internal reflection of your development. Educational researchers continue to discover the benefits of "metacognitive reflection," which is a fancy way of saying that you learn a great deal by taking a moment to think back on not only what you learned and accomplished but also how you learned it and why you did so in the first place. Telling your story through an online portfolio This chapter helps you figure out how to use an online portfolio to tell your story to others, as well as to help you shape that story for yourself in the first place. Thus, Chapter Nine describes using Adobe Portfolio and Behance as both a kind of resume/showcase as well as a journal/diary to reflect on your development. In other words, portfolios are most powerful when they help you look back so that you can move forward. |
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| description | dcterms:description | Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum |
| content | sioc:content | 9A: Why Make an Online Portfolio?The better question is probably "Why not make an online portfolio of your work?" At this point, in the final chapter in Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum, you are likely to have produced some pretty cool things, including images, sounds, videos, presentations, and perhaps even interactive media. You've worked hard, and you should be proud of your accomplishments -- so, how can you share your digital productions with the world, especially future employers, clients, and mentors?Adobe Creative Cloud has two fantastic options for creating an online collection of your best work: Portfolio and Behance. Portfolio and Behance are actually two limbs on the same tree, which is Creative Cloud. They work best together, although you could use them independently. And they connect seamlessly with all of the things you build and store in Creative Cloud. But, before we get to the practical aspects of an online portfolio, let's first consider for a minute the nature of a portfolio, or a (pre)professional collection of your best work. When and why should you choose to make a portfolio? And, thus, how should you go about planning, making, and editing a portfolio using Creative Cloud? On the one hand, portfolios, dossiers, and resumes been used across history for so many different purposes, by so many different people, and in so many different contexts that it is impossible to say “what they really are” or “how they really work” once and for all. On the other hand, portfolios have been used in some widely consistent ways, namely: to demonstrate one's abilities and to reflect on and better understand the nature of one's work The first idea above, to demonstrate what you can do, is obvious. But the second purpose, to help you better understand yourself and your work, is not as obvious but potentially just as powerful. The power of (re)collection By definition, a portfolio is a particularly effective way to collect and showcase examples of your best work. When you make something cool and powerful with Adobe Creative Cloud, you want to share it. So, on the one hand, Portfolio and Behance make it easy for you to collect your best work in Creative Cloud and share it with the world -- the primary audience for your portfolio is certainly employers, clients, collaborators, and mentors. On the other hand, you are a not-so-secondary audience for your own portfolio. If the outside world is the audience for your portfolio as a collection of your work, then you are the audience for your portfolio as a recollection of your work. Your portfolio is an external projection of your talent, but it is also an internal reflection of your development. Educational researchers continue to discover the benefits of "metacognitive reflection," which is a fancy way of saying that you learn a great deal by taking a moment to think back on not only what you learned and accomplished but also how you learned it and why you did so in the first place. Telling your story through an online portfolio This chapter helps you figure out how to use an online portfolio to tell your story to others, as well as to help you shape that story for yourself in the first place. Thus, Chapter Nine describes using Adobe Portfolio and Behance as both a kind of resume/showcase as well as a journal/diary to reflect on your development. In other words, portfolios are most powerful when they help you look back so that you can move forward. |
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| title | dcterms:title | Chapter Nine: Online Portfolio, Personal Website |
| description | dcterms:description | Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum |
| content | sioc:content | 9A: Why Make an Online Portfolio?The better question is probably "Why not make an online portfolio of your work?" At this point, in the final chapter in Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum, you are likely to have produced some pretty cool things, including images, sounds, videos, presentations, and perhaps even interactive media. You've worked hard, and you should be proud of your accomplishments -- so, how can you share your digital productions with the world, especially future employers, clients, and mentors?Adobe Creative Cloud has two fantastic options for creating an online collection of your best work: Portfolio and Behance. Portfolio and Behance are actually two limbs on the same tree, which is Creative Cloud. They work best together, although you could use them independently. And they connect seamlessly with all of the things you build and store in Creative Cloud. But, before we get to the practical aspects of an online portfolio, let's first consider for a minute the nature of a portfolio, or a (pre)professional collection of your best work. When and why should you choose to make a portfolio? And, thus, how should you go about planning, making, and editing a portfolio using Creative Cloud? On the one hand, portfolios, dossiers, and resumes been used across history for so many different purposes, by so many different people, and in so many different contexts that it is impossible to say “what they really are” or “how they really work” once and for all. On the other hand, portfolios have been used in some widely consistent ways, namely: to demonstrate one's abilities and to reflect on and better understand the nature of one's work The first idea above, to demonstrate what you can do, is obvious. But the second purpose, to help you better understand yourself and your work, is not as obvious but potentially just as powerful. The power of (re)collection By definition, a portfolio is a particularly effective way to collect and showcase examples of your best work. When you make something cool and powerful with Adobe Creative Cloud, you want to share it. So, on the one hand, Portfolio and Behance make it easy for you to collect your best work in Creative Cloud and share it with the world -- the primary audience for your portfolio is certainly employers, clients, collaborators, and mentors. On the other hand, you are a not-so-secondary audience for your own portfolio. If the outside world is the audience for your portfolio as a collection of your work, then you are the audience for your portfolio as a recollection of your work. Your portfolio is an external projection of your talent, but it is also an internal reflection of your development. Educational researchers continue to discover the benefits of "metacognitive reflection," which is a fancy way of saying that you learn a great deal by taking a moment to think back on not only what you learned and accomplished but also how you learned it and why you did so in the first place. Telling your story through an online portfolio This chapter helps you figure out how to use an online portfolio to tell your story to others, as well as to help you shape that story for yourself in the first place. Thus, Chapter Nine describes using Adobe Portfolio and Behance as both a kind of resume/showcase as well as a journal/diary to reflect on your development. In other words, portfolios are most powerful when they help you look back so that you can move forward. |
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| title | dcterms:title | Chapter Nine: Online Portfolio, Personal Website |
| description | dcterms:description | Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum |
| content | sioc:content | 9A: Why Make an Online Portfolio?The better question is probably "Why not make an online portfolio of your work?" At this point, in the final chapter in Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum, you are likely to have produced some pretty cool things, including images, sounds, videos, presentations, and perhaps even interactive media. You've worked hard, and you should be proud of your accomplishments -- so, how can you share your digital productions with the world, especially future employers, clients, and mentors?Adobe Creative Cloud has two fantastic options for creating an online collection of your best work: Portfolio and Behance. Portfolio and Behance are actually two limbs on the same tree, which is Creative Cloud. They work best together, although you could use them independently. And they connect seamlessly with all of the things you build and store in Creative Cloud. But, before we get to the practical aspects of an online portfolio, let's first consider for a minute the nature of a portfolio, or a (pre)professional collection of your best work. When and why should you choose to make a portfolio? And, thus, how should you go about planning, making, and editing a portfolio using Creative Cloud? On the one hand, portfolios, dossiers, and resumes been used across history for so many different purposes, by so many different people, and in so many different contexts that it is impossible to say “what they really are” or “how they really work” once and for all. On the other hand, portfolios have been used in some widely consistent ways, namely: to demonstrate one's abilities and to reflect on and better understand the nature of one's work The first idea above, to demonstrate what you can do, is obvious. But the second purpose, to help you better understand yourself and your work, is not as obvious but potentially just as powerful. The power of (re)collection By definition, a portfolio is a particularly effective way to collect and showcase examples of your best work. When you make something cool and powerful with Adobe Creative Cloud, you want to share it. So, on the one hand, Portfolio and Behance make it easy for you to collect your best work in Creative Cloud and share it with the world -- the primary audience for your portfolio is certainly employers, clients, collaborators, and mentors. On the other hand, you are a not-so-secondary audience for your own portfolio. If the outside world is the audience for your portfolio as a collection of your work, then you are the audience for your portfolio as a recollection of your work. Your portfolio is an external projection of your talent, but it is also an internal reflection of your development. Educational researchers continue to discover the benefits of "metacognitive reflection," which is a fancy way of saying that you learn a great deal by taking a moment to think back on not only what you learned and accomplished but also how you learned it and why you did so in the first place. Telling your story through an online portfolio This chapter helps you figure out how to use an online portfolio to tell your story to others, as well as to help you shape that story for yourself in the first place. Thus, Chapter Nine describes using Adobe Portfolio and Behance as both a kind of resume/showcase as well as a journal/diary to reflect on your development. In other words, portfolios are most powerful when they help you look back so that you can move forward. |
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| description | dcterms:description | Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum |
| content | sioc:content | 5A: Why Make an Online Portfolio?The better question is probably "Why not make an online portfolio of your work?" At this point, in the final chapter in Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum, you are likely to have produced some pretty cool things, including images, sounds, videos, presentations, and perhaps even interactive media. You've worked hard, and you should be proud of your accomplishments -- so, how can you share your digital productions with the world, especially future employers, clients, and mentors?Adobe Creative Cloud has two fantastic options for creating an online collection of your best work: Portfolio and Behance. Portfolio and Behance are actually two limbs on the same tree, which is Creative Cloud. They work best together, although you could use them independently. And they connect seamlessly with all of the things you build and store in Creative Cloud. But, before we get to the practical aspects of an online portfolio, let's first consider for a minute the nature of a portfolio, or a (pre)professional collection of your best work. When and why should you choose to make a portfolio? And, thus, how should you go about planning, making, and editing a portfolio using Creative Cloud? On the one hand, portfolios, dossiers, and resumes been used across history for so many different purposes, by so many different people, and in so many different contexts that it is impossible to say “what they really are” or “how they really work” once and for all. On the other hand, portfolios have been used in some widely consistent ways, namely: to demonstrate one's abilities and to reflect on and better understand the nature of one's work The first idea above, to demonstrate what you can do, is obvious. But the second purpose, to help you better understand yourself and your work, is not as obvious but potentially just as powerful. The power of (re)collection By definition, a portfolio is a particularly effective way to collect and showcase examples of your best work. When you make something cool and powerful with Adobe Creative Cloud, you want to share it. So, on the one hand, Portfolio and Behance make it easy for you to collect your best work in Creative Cloud and share it with the world -- the primary audience for your portfolio is certainly employers, clients, collaborators, and mentors. On the other hand, you are a not-so-secondary audience for your own portfolio. If the outside world is the audience for your portfolio as a collection of your work, then you are the audience for your portfolio as a recollection of your work. Your portfolio is an external projection of your talent, but it is also an internal reflection of your development. Educational researchers continue to discover the benefits of "metacognitive reflection," which is a fancy way of saying that you learn a great deal by taking a moment to think back on not only what you learned and accomplished but also how you learned it and why you did so in the first place. Telling your story through an online portfolio This chapter helps you figure out how to use an online portfolio to tell your story to others, as well as to help you shape that story for yourself in the first place. Thus, Chapter Nine describes using Adobe Portfolio and Behance as both a kind of resume/showcase as well as a journal/diary to reflect on your development. In other words, portfolios are most powerful when they help you look back so that you can move forward. |
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| content | sioc:content | 5A: Why Make an Online Portfolio?The better question is probably "Why not make an online portfolio of your work?" At this point, in the final chapter in Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum, you are likely to have produced some pretty cool things, including images, sounds, videos, presentations, and perhaps even interactive media. You've worked hard, and you should be proud of your accomplishments -- so, how can you share your digital productions with the world, especially future employers, clients, and mentors?Adobe Creative Cloud has two fantastic options for creating an online collection of your best work: Portfolio and Behance. Portfolio and Behance are actually two limbs on the same tree, which is Creative Cloud. They work best together, although you could use them independently. And they connect seamlessly with all of the things you build and store in Creative Cloud. But, before we get to the practical aspects of an online portfolio, let's first consider for a minute the nature of a portfolio, or a (pre)professional collection of your best work. When and why should you choose to make a portfolio? And, thus, how should you go about planning, making, and editing a portfolio using Creative Cloud? On the one hand, portfolios, dossiers, and resumes been used across history for so many different purposes, by so many different people, and in so many different contexts that it is impossible to say “what they really are” or “how they really work” once and for all. On the other hand, portfolios have been used in some widely consistent ways, namely: to demonstrate one's abilities and to reflect on and better understand the nature of one's work The first idea above, to demonstrate what you can do, is obvious. But the second purpose, to help you better understand yourself and your work, is not as obvious but potentially just as powerful. The power of (re)collection By definition, a portfolio is a particularly effective way to collect and showcase examples of your best work. When you make something cool and powerful with Adobe Creative Cloud, you want to share it. So, on the one hand, Portfolio and Behance make it easy for you to collect your best work in Creative Cloud and share it with the world -- the entire world, and certainly employers, clients, collaborators, and mentors are the primary audience for your portfolio. On the other hand, you are also a not-so-secondary audience for your portfolio. If the outside world is the audience for your portfolio as a collection of your work, then you are the audience for your portfolio as a recollection of your work. Your portfolio is an external projection of your talent, but it is also an internal reflection of your development. Educational researchers continue to discover the benefits of "metacognitive reflection," which is a fancy way of saying that you learn a great deal by taking a moment to think back on not only what you learned and accomplished but also how you learned and why you did so in the first place. Telling your story through an online portfolio This chapter helps you figure out how to use an online portfolio to tell your story to others, as well as to help you shape that story for yourself in the first place. Thus, Chapter Nine describes using Adobe Portfolio and Behance as both a kind of resume/showcase as well as a journal/diary to reflect on your development. In other words, portfolios are most powerful when they help you look back so that you can move forward. |
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| title | dcterms:title | Chapter Nine: Online Portfolio, Personal Website |
| description | dcterms:description | Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum |
| content | sioc:content | 5A: Why Make an Online Portfolio?The better question is probably "Why not make an online portfolio of your work?" At this point, in the final chapter in Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum, you are likely to have produced some pretty cool things, including images, sounds, videos, presentations, and perhaps even interactive media. You've worked hard, and you should be proud of your accomplishments -- so, how can you share your digital productions with the world, especially future employers, clients, and mentors?Adobe Creative Cloud has two fantastic options for creating an online collection of your best work: Portfolio and Behance. Portfolio and Behance are actually two limbs on the same tree, which is Creative Cloud. They work best together, although you could use them independently. And they connect seamlessly with all of the things you build and store in Creative Cloud. But, before we get to the practical aspects of an online portfolio, let's first consider for a minute the nature of a portfolio, or a (pre)professional collection of your best work. When and why should you choose to make a portfolio? And, thus, how should you go about planning, making, and editing a portfolio using Creative Cloud? On the one hand, portfolios, dossiers, and resumes been used across history for so many different purposes, by so many different people, and in so many different contexts that it is impossible to say “what they really are” or “how they really work” once and for all. On the other hand, portfolios has been used in some widely consistent ways, namely: to demonstrate one's abilities and to reflect on and better understand the nature of one's work The first idea above, to demonstrate what you can do, is obvious. But the second purpose, to help you better understand yourself and your work, is not as obvious but potentially just as powerful. The power of (re)collection By definition, a portfolio is a particularly effective way to collect and showcase examples of your best work. When you make something cool and powerful with Adobe Creative Cloud, you want to share it. So, on the one hand, Portfolio and Behance make it easy for you to collect your best work in Creative Cloud and share it with the world -- the entire world, and certainly employers, clients, collaborators, and mentors are the primary audience for your portfolio. On the other hand, you are also a not-so-secondary audience for your portfolio. If the outside world is the audience for your portfolio as a collection of your work, then you are the audience for your portfolio as a recollection of your work. Your portfolio is an external projection of your talent, but it is also an internal reflection of your development. Educational researchers continue to discover the benefits of "metacognitive reflection," which is a fancy way of saying that you learn a great deal by taking a moment to think back on not only what you learned and accomplished but also how you learned and why you did so in the first place. Telling your story through an online portfolio This chapter helps you figure out how to use an online portfolio to tell your story to others, as well as to help you shape that story for yourself in the first place. Thus, Chapter Nine describes using Adobe Portfolio and Behance as both a kind of resume/showcase as well as a journal/diary to reflect on your development. In other words, portfolios are most powerful when they help you look back so that you can move forward. |
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| title | dcterms:title | Chapter Nine: Online Portfolio, Personal Website |
| description | dcterms:description | Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum |
| content | sioc:content | 5A: Why Make an Online Portfolio?The better question is probably "Why not make an online portfolio of your work?" At this point, in the final chapter in Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum, you are likely to have produced some pretty cool things, including images, sounds, videos, presentations, and perhaps even interactive media. You've worked hard, and you should be proud of your accomplishments -- so, how can you share your digital productions with the world, especially future employers, clients, and mentors?Adobe Creative Cloud has two fantastic options for creating an online collection of your best work: Portfolio and Behance. Portfolio and Behance are actually two limbs on the same tree, which is Creative Cloud. They work best together, although you could use them independently. And they connect seamlessly with all of the things you build and store in Creative Cloud. But, before we get to the practical aspects of an online portfolio, let's first consider for a minute the nature of a portfolio, or a (pre)professional collection of your best work. When and why should you choose to make a portfolio? And, thus, how should you go about planning, making, and editing a film using Creative Cloud? On the one hand, portfolios, dossiers, and resumes been used across history for so many different purposes, by so many different people, and in so many different contexts that it is impossible to say “what they really are” or “how they really work” once and for all. On the other hand, portfolios has been used in some widely consistent ways, namely: to demonstrate one's abilities and to reflect on and better understand the nature of one's work The first idea above, to demonstrate what you can do, is obvious. But the second purpose, to help you better understand yourself and your work, is not as obvious but potentially just as powerful. The power of (re)collection By definition, a portfolio is a particularly effective way to collect and showcase examples of your best work. When you make something cool and powerful with Adobe Creative Cloud, you want to share it. So, on the one hand, Portfolio and Behance make it easy for you to collect your best work in Creative Cloud and share it with the world -- the entire world, and certainly employers, clients, collaborators, and mentors are the primary audience for your portfolio. On the other hand, you are also a not-so-secondary audience for your portfolio. If the outside world is the audience for your portfolio as a collection of your work, then you are the audience for your portfolio as a recollection of your work. Your portfolio is an external projection of your talent, but it is also an internal reflection of your development. Educational researchers continue to discover the benefits of "metacognitive reflection," which is a fancy way of saying that you learn a great deal by taking a moment to think back on not only what you learned and accomplished but also how you learned and why you did so in the first place. Telling your story through an online portfolio This chapter helps you figure out how to use an online portfolio to tell your story to others, as well as to help you shape that story for yourself in the first place. Thus, Chapter Nine describes using Adobe Portfolio and Behance as both a kind of resume/showcase as well as a journal/diary to reflect on your development. In other words, portfolios are most powerful when they help you look back so that you can move forward. |
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| title | dcterms:title | Chapter Nine: Online Portfolio, Personal Website |
| description | dcterms:description | Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum |
| content | sioc:content | 5A: Why Make an Online Portfolio?The better question is probably "Why not make an online portfolio of your work?" At this point, in the final chapter in Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum, you are likely to have produced some pretty cool things, including images, sounds, videos, presentations, and perhaps even interactive media. You've worked hard, and you should be proud of your accomplishments -- so, how can you share your digital productions with the world, especially future employers, clients, and mentors?Adobe Creative Cloud has two fantastic options for creating an online collection of your best work: Portfolio and Behance. Portfolio and Behance are actually two limbs on the same tree, which is Creative Cloud. They work best together, although you could use them independently. And they connect seamlessly with all of the things you build and store in Creative Cloud. But, before we get to the practical aspects of an online portfolio, let's first consider for a minute the nature of a portfolio, or (pre)professional collection of your best work. When and why should you choose to make a portfolio? And, thus, how should you go about planning, making, and editing a film using Creative Cloud? On the one hand, portfolios, dossiers, and resumes been used across history for so many different purposes, by so many different people, and in so many different contexts that it is impossible to say “what they really are” or “how they really work” once and for all. On the other hand, portfolios has been used in some widely consistent ways, namely: to demonstrate one's abilities and to reflect on and better understand the nature of one's work The first idea above, to demonstrate what you can do, is obvious. But the second purpose, to help you better understand yourself and your work, is not as obvious but potentially just as powerful. The power of (re)collection By definition, a portfolio is a particularly effective way to collect and showcase examples of your best work. When you make something cool and powerful with Adobe Creative Cloud, you want to share it. So, on the one hand, Portfolio and Behance make it easy for you to collect your best work in Creative Cloud and share it with the world -- the entire world, and certainly employers, clients, collaborators, and mentors are the primary audience for your portfolio. On the other hand, you are also a not-so-secondary audience for your portfolio. If the outside world is the audience for your portfolio as a collection of your work, then you are the audience for your portfolio as a recollection of your work. Your portfolio is an external projection of your talent, but it is also an internal reflection of your development. Educational researchers continue to discover the benefits of "metacognitive reflection," which is a fancy way of saying that you learn a great deal by taking a moment to think back on not only what you learned and accomplished but also how you learned and why you did so in the first place. Telling your story through an online portfolio This chapter helps you figure out how to use an online portfolio to tell your story to others, as well as to help you shape that story for yourself in the first place. Thus, Chapter Nine describes using Adobe Portfolio and Behance as both a kind of resume/showcase as well as a journal/diary to reflect on your development. In other words, portfolios are most powerful when they help you look back so that you can move forward. |
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| title | dcterms:title | Chapter Nine: Online Portfolio, Personal Website |
| description | dcterms:description | Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum |
| content | sioc:content | 5A: Why Make an Online Portfolio?The better question is probably "Why not make an online portfolio of your work?" At this point, in the final chapter in Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum, you are likely to have produced some pretty cool things, including images, sounds, videos, presentations, and perhaps even interactive media. You've worked hard, and you should be proud of your accomplishments -- so, how can you share your digital productions with the world, especially future employers, clients, and mentors?Adobe Creative Cloud has two fantastic options for creating an online collection of your best work: Portfolio and Behance. Portfolio and Behance are actually two limbs on the same tree, which is Creative Cloud. They work best together, although you could use them independently. And they connect seamlessly with all of the things you build and store in Creative Cloud. But, before we get to the practical aspects of an online portfolio, let's first consider for a minute the nature of a portfolio, or (pre)professional collection of your best work. When and why should you choose to make a portfolio? And, thus, how should you go about planning, making, and editing a film using Creative Cloud? On the one hand, portfolios, dossiers, and resumes been used across history for so many different purposes, by so many different people, and in so many different contexts that it is impossible to say “what they really are” or “how they really work” once and for all. On the other hand, portfolios has been used in some widely consistent ways, namely: to demonstrate one's abilities and to reflect on and better understand the nature of one's work The first idea above, to demonstrate what you can do, is obvious. But the second purpose, to help you better understand yourself and your work, is not as obvious but potentially just as powerful. The power of (re)collection By definition, a portfolio is a particularly effective way to collect and showcase examples of your best work. When you make something cool and powerful with Adobe Creative Cloud, you want to share it. So, on the one hand, Portfolio and Behance make it easy for you to collect your best work in Creative Cloud and share it with the world -- the entire world, and certainly employers, clients, collaborators, and mentors are the primary audience for your portfolio. On the other hand, you are also a not-so-secondary audience for your portfolio. If the outside world is the audience for your portfolio as a collection of your work, then you are the audience for your portfolio as a recollection of your work. Your portfolio is an external projection of your talent, but it is also an internal reflection of your development. Educational researchers continue to discover the benefits of "metacognitive reflection," which is a fancy way of saying that you learn a great deal by taking a moment to think back on not only what you learned and accomplished but also how you learned and why you did so in the first place. Telling your story through an online portfolio This chapter helps you figure out how to use an online portfolio to tell your story to others, as well as to help you shape that story for yourself in the first place. Thus, Chapter Nine describes using Adobe Portfolio and Behance as both a kind of resume/showcase as well as a journal/diary to reflect on your development. In other words, portfolios are most powerful when they help you look back so that you can move forward. |
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| title | dcterms:title | Chapter Nine: Online Portfolio, Personal Website |
| description | dcterms:description | Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum |
| content | sioc:content | 5A: Why Make an Online Portfolio?The better question is probably "Why not make an online portfolio of your work?" At this point, in the final chapter in Adobe Creative Cloud Across the Curriculum, you are likely to have produced some pretty cool things, including images, sounds, videos, presentations, and perhaps even interactive media. You've worked hard, and you should be proud of your accomplishments -- so, how can you share your digital productions with the world, especially future employers, clients, and mentors?Adobe Creative Cloud has two fantastic options for creating an online collection of your best work: Portfolio and Behance. Portfolio and Behance are actually two limbs on the same tree, which is Creative Cloud. They work best together, although you could use them independently. And they connect seamlessly with all of the things you build and store in Creative Cloud. But, before we get to the practical aspects of an online portfolio, let's first consider for a minute the nature of a portfolio, or (pre)professional collection of your best work. When and why should you choose to make a portfolio? And, thus, how should you go about planning, making, and editing a film using Creative Cloud? On the one hand, portfolios, dossiers, and resumes been used across history for so many different purposes, by so many different people, and in so many different contexts that it is impossible to say “what they really are” or “how they really work” once and for all. On the other hand, portfolios has been used in some widely consistent ways, namely: to demonstrate one's abilities and to reflect on and better understand the nature of one's work The first idea above, to demonstrate what you can do, is obvious. But the second purpose, to help you better understand yourself and your work, is not as obvious but potentially just as powerful. The power of (re)collection By definition, a portfolio is a particularly effective way to collect and showcase examples of your best work. When you make something cool and powerful with Adobe Creative Cloud, you want to share it. So, on the one hand, Portfolio and Behance make it easy for you to collect your best work in Creative Cloud and share it with the world -- the entire world, and certainly employers, clients, collaborators, and mentors are the primary audience for your portfolio. On the other hand, you are also a not-so-secondary audience for your portfolio. If the outside world is the audience for your portfolio as a collection of your work, then you are the audience for your portfolio as a recollection of your work. Your portfolio is an external projection of your talent, but it is also an internal reflection of your development. Educational researchers continue to discover the benefits of "metacognitive reflection," which is a fancy way of saying that you learn a great deal by taking a moment to think back on not only what you learned and accomplished but also how you learned and why you did so in the first place. Learning to tell stories through audio-visual projects This chapter helps you figure out how to tell a story using film/video or audio/podcast. It focuses mostly on Adobe Premiere Pro CC, which is advanced video editing software, but you can also use this chapter with Adobe Premiere Clip or Adobe Spark Video and Adobe Audition CC for sound editing. |
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| title | dcterms:title | Chapter Nine: Online Portfolio, Personal Website |
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| title | dcterms:title | Chapter Nine: Online Portfolio, Personal Website |
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