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Using and Creating an Audit Trail

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Creating an Audit Trail

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On this page, you will find examples of how audit trails have been used in different settings.  You can also find out more about audit trails in Chapter 2 of Negotiating Critical Literacies with Young Children.

What Is an Audit Trail?

An audit trail is a visible articulation of learning over time.  Instances of learning are captured and represented through the use of various artifacts including photographs, drawings, writing, and book covers.  It is a powerful tool for

  • Showing the children’s in-process thinking over time
  • Generating topics for study
  • Constructing meaning
  • Circulating meaning

An audit trail is meant to be visible not only to the people in a classroom community but to others in the school community as well. This public visibility makes the audit trail a participatory site for becoming involved in the children’s learning. Students and teachers research their world together and produce representations of that research, in the form of an audit trail displayed on a bulletin board, or other surface, covered with various artifacts of learning. Throughout the year, previous learning events can be revisited using the artifacts as trigger images that serve as reminders of work done and the learning that has taken place.