100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4,6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Exam (elaborations)

HED4814 EXAMINATIONS PORTFOLIO ANSWERS 2026

Rating
-
Sold
1
Pages
19
Grade
A+
Uploaded on
06-01-2026
Written in
2025/2026

HED4814 EXAMINATIONS PORTFOLIO ANSWERS 2026









Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Document information

Uploaded on
January 6, 2026
Number of pages
19
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Questions & answers

Subjects

Content preview

HED4814
EXAMINATIONS
PORTFOLIO ANSWERS
2026




HED4814 EXAMINATIONS PORTFOLIO
ANSWERS 2026

,HED4814 ASSESSMENT: Portfolio examination 2026


QUESTION 1.1


a) Learner background and needs
- Context: 10th-grade Geography/Science class in a diverse urban high school
(approx. 26–30 students). Many students are multilingual; there is a range of literacy
levels and prior experience with academic research.
- Demographics and needs:
- Students bring varied cultural backgrounds, languages, and funds of knowledge
(experiences with water issues at home or in their communities).
- Some students have limited access to high-speed internet or quiet study spaces
at home; need for inclusive, low-barrier resources.
- Learners require opportunities to develop collaboration, data literacy, evidence-
based argumentation, and communication skills for diverse audiences.
- Learning barriers to address:
- Language paraphrasing challenges; need for multiple representations of
information.
- Equal participation in group work; some students may defer to others without
structured roles.
- Ensuring relevance to students’ lives and communities to foster motivation and
critical thinking.
- Strengths to leverage:
- Strong interest in local issues, family/community ties to water and environment,
and familiarity with smartphones/computers for data collection and communication.
- Needs in this PBL: authentic, real-world problem with community relevance; diverse
entry points for research (data, interviews, local documents); opportunities to
demonstrate learning through multiple formats (presentation, report, poster, video);
and explicit supports for language learners and students with different abilities.


b) Outline the steps of the activity
Time frame: ~4 weeks (adjustable)

, 1) Engage and frame the problem
- Present a real local water issue (e.g., aging infrastructure leading to water outages
and contamination concerns).
- Activate prior knowledge with quick diagnostics and a sample data snippet.
- Form diverse groups (4–5 students each) and assign roles (e.g., researcher, data
analyst, community liaison, designer, presenter). Use rotating roles to build multiple
skill sets.


2) Explore and gather information
- Students collect data from multiple sources: municipal water reports, news articles,
community interviews, and if possible, a field visit or virtual tour of a local water
facility.
- Include guest inputs from community members or a local water utility representative
via a short Q&A.
- Students document sources with attention to credibility and bias; practice note-
taking and citation.


3) Understand and interpret
- Groups analyze data to identify root causes, affected populations, and potential
constraints (budget, policy, infrastructure).
- Facilitate mini-sessions (jigsaw or stations) where students learn key concepts
(e.g., water treatment basics, cost-benefit analysis, equity considerations) through
student-friendly explanations and multilingual glossaries.


4) Design and propose solutions
- Each group develops a feasible intervention or set of recommendations (e.g., a
policy brief, a community education plan, a low-cost infrastructure proposal, or a
digital awareness campaign).
- Create a concrete deliverable tailored to a stakeholder audience (e.g., a 2-page
policy memo for the city council, a bilingual flyer for residents, a poster with data
visuals).


5) Test, refine, and practice communication
- Groups rehearse their presentation and receive feedback from peers and a mock
community panel (teachers, peers, possibly a community member).

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
geologyforumscientist University of South Africa (Unisa)
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
1992
Member since
3 year
Number of followers
1132
Documents
1085
Last sold
20 hours ago

3,7

258 reviews

5
118
4
43
3
45
2
15
1
37

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their exams and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can immediately select a different document that better matches what you need.

Pay how you prefer, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card or EFT and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions