To answer your question, the zip file seems to give you two different things:
- Any work that was attached to the portfolio.
- Lets say John attached his Professional Speaking presentation to his portfolio.
- When John downloads his portfolio he will see that the zip file contains his Professional Speaking PowerPoint that was submitted to the assignment.
- What looks like HTML files for the various portfolio pages.
- These don't appear to have CSS code, so it's just text and links.
Now, if the student snags their preview link and shares that, then someone can go through their portfolio and see all of it's content without having to sign into Canvas or anything.
Here is what my example portfolio looks like: https://ufl.instructure.com/eportfolios/17133?view=preview
In terms of what Chofer said, Portfolium looks like a nicer version of portfolios. I haven't had time to explore Portfolium myself, but I imagine it has to be better then portfolios. While Portfolios is a cool feature, it is very clunky and even making this example for you was time consuming.
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