Hi education friends!
I've spent the past 5 years helping teachers transition out of the classroom and into corporate L&D as someone who has been in the instructional design world for a decade.
One thing I find is that "teacher portfolios" often get ignored because they're full of lesson plans rather than projects that show you understand the difference between a student and a stakeholder who is trying to solve a specific problem by a deadline (usually ASAP).
If you're trying to make the switch, the hardest part is usually teaching yourself new tools (like authoring tools). You know the drill, watch endless YouTube tutorials, try something, get frustrated, repeat.
Full transparency -- I am a judge for the iSpring Course Creation Contest that will be launching later this spring, but beyond that, I love telling people about it because it gives you free access to an authoring tool and a deadline. You can create a portfolio asset -- but on top of it, you can also win some pretty sweet prizes and get feedback from real corporate learning experts. The contest hasn't launched yet, so I don't have a link to share, but you can follow iSpring on social media to get updates.
Even if you're not interested in the contest, I encourage you to think about these things as you create portfolio projects - Don't wait for the perfect idea - just pick a business prompt (or get AI to help) and build it - Don't spend too much time on one thing -- you won't be able to do this in the real world - Get real feedback - practice getting feedback now because there's nothing worse than a hiring manager tearing apart your work!
Submitted 2026-02-25T20:20:00+00:00 by Useful-Stuff-LD https://ift.tt/hfJiy9u