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RAPPORT WWW.RECORDINGACHIEVEMENT.ORG Issue 1 (2015) The International Journal for Recording Achievement, Planning and Portfolios Becoming conscious of learning and nursing in clinical settings Kirsten Nielsen, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark Birthe D Pedersen, University of Southern Denmark, Denmark Niels H. Helms, University College Sjælland, Denmark Abstract: Literature shows several benefits of implementing ePortfolio and focusing on learning styles within nursing education. However, there is some ambiguity, so the aim was to investigate learning mediated by the mandatory part of ePortfolio in clinical settings. The design takes a phenomenological hermeneutic approach. The setting was a ten-week clinical course in Basic Nursing, and participants were 11 first-year students randomly assigned. Data was generated by participant observ ations, narrative interviews and portfolio documents. The entire data material was interpreted according to Paul Ricoeur’s theory of interpretation. This paper reports that the mandatory part of the portfolio promotes consciousness of own learning and competencies in clinical nursing and raises students` consciousness of nurse identity. It gives preceptors the opportunity to differentiate their supervision for individual students and guide them to improve their learning potential. However, the language used in the individual study plan must be clarified to avoid ambiguity, and there is potential to tai lor the individual study plan. Background The ePortfolio is inspired by the Swedish psychologist and portfolio pioneer Roger Ellmin, according to whom implementing ePortfolio methodology in education represents democratic values, such as human integrity, freedom and self-control. Inclusivity is the principle of learning, so the ePortfolio acknowledges different intelligences and ways of learning. This requires that the individual student is accepted wherever she or he is in their own learning process (Ellmin, 2008). Students are involved in managing their own learning. The aim is to help students to understand how and what they are learning, and when they learn the most. Portfolio work trains the student to reflect on their own work alone or with others, to structure and describe their goals, to verbalize experiences and become conscious of their own learning process, and to assess their own learning outcome (Ellmin, 2006). A systematic review of Buckley et al. (2009) found that ePortfolio is mainly used in clinical settings and that reflection and a kind of assessment is required. In Nursing Education, most portfolios are learning portfolios that are both formatively and summatively assessed. In 78 % of cases, completion of portfolios is mandatory (Buckley et al., 2009). According to a review by Green, Wyllie, and Jackson (2013) development of an ePortfolio involves theory, concepts, information, observations and experience, which represent value for learners across learnings styles. Literature about X\