Section One: Teacher Candidate Introduction
to the Elementary Portfolio Project
Introduction
“Education is the passport to the future, for
tomorrow belongs to those who prepare for it today”.
(Malcolm X, n.d.).
Preparing for this portfolio, I needed to gather all
the materials that best represent me as a teacher. When I
started this program I had an idea of all the things that a
teacher does to educate her students . Now that I am
near the end of my educational journey here at Medaille
College , I know so much more about the education
field and my role as an educator.
In this portfolio the skills that I have acquired at
Medaille will be shown through the artifacts I have
completed. Ever since I was little I have wanted to
become a teacher. I had this one teacher in the third
grade that I admired named Mrs. Herlan. All the students
loved her and spent their lunch and study halls in her
classroom. I wanted to be just like her when I grew up.
Entering Medaille, I kept my motivation going and was
very excited to learn the skills that I would be using as a
teacher in the near future.
Overview and Rationale
This portfolio will showcase some of my best
work while at Medaille College. This portfolio will
include my philosophy of education which is very
important to show my views on how I will contribute to
the field of education. I will also include some on my
best lesson plans and learning segments , which
showcases my understanding of differentiating and
assessing the needs of the children that would be in my
classroom. I will also include my professional
development and workshop certificates. These
professional development classes, provide different
strategies that can be used in the classroom. The
workshops DASA, SAVE, and Child
Abuse and Maltreatment, provide need to know
information about the best way to handle complicated
situations that might happen in the classroom. The
Pechka Kucha PowerPoint
presentation is one of my favorite assignments. It was so
interesting to make a PowerPoint presentation with just
pictures and make a recording explaining each slide.
The work that will be showcase in this portfolio, will be
a reflection of who I am as a teacher. When it comes to
being in the classroom, many things has changed over
the years, such as curriculum. There are many ways to
differentiate the students in your classroom now that
wasn’t as available when I was a student in school many
years ago. Literacy is extremely important when it
comes to instruction, and now there is so much support
to helping students reach their literacy goals. RIT and
AIS, teacher push in or pull out during classroom
reading times to provide that extra reading help to the
students that need it.
Portfolio Development
When putting my thoughts together to start this project,
it took me awhile to decide what I wanted to include in
the portfolio. I looked back on the assignments that I did
my first semester at Medaille College, and compared
them to my second semester and seen the growth in my
assignments that I produced. I took time to look through
everything that I had done throughout the semesters. I
completed lots of planning on what documents to include
and if they would represent what I learned in this
Masters Program. I chose Assessments, workshops,
presentations, and many other artifacts that will be
displayed. These artifacts will come together and create a
good professional portfolio that I can use in the future.
Theories, Theorists and Experts in the Field of
Education
There are many theorist that have influenced me in
during my journey in education. They are; Benjamin
Bloom, Lev Vygotsky, and Geneva Gay. When
referencing most of my lessons I referenced Bloom’s
Taxonomy quite a bit. Benjamin Bloom Benjamin
Bloom was a U.S.
psychiatrist who made several significant contributions
to education, mastery learning, and talent development.
Bloom’s Taxonomy describes major areas in cognitive
domain. The taxonomy begins by defining knowledge as
remembering previously learned material. According to
Bloom, knowledge represents the lowest level of
learning outcomes in the cognitive domain. Knowledge
is followed by comprehension, or the ability to grasp the
meaning of material. This goes just beyond the
knowledge level. Comprehension is the lowest level of
understanding. Application is next , it requires a higher
understanding than comprehension. It refers to how
students apply new principles that they have learned. The
next level is analysis, which deals with the outcomes of
understanding the material. Then there is synthesis
which is the ability to put the parts of what the student
learns together. The last level is evaluation, which is the
ability to judge the material that is learned (Bellis, 2019).
Whether it was doing lesson plans, assessments, or
anytime working with students, I refer to his steps to
assess the students learning. Lev Vygotsky, is another
theorist that I referenced throughout my studies at
Medaille College. His Zone Of Proximal Development
refers to the difference between what a learner can do
without help and what he or she can achieve with
guidance and encouragement from a skilled partner.
Vygotsky believed that when a student is in the zone of
proximal development for a particular task, providing the
appropriate assistance will give the student enough a
boost for that student to complete the task. To assist a
person to move throughout the zone of proximal
development, educators are encouraged to focus on three
important components which aid the learning process:
The presence of a student with a higher skill level than
the other child, through social interactions with a skillful
tutor that allow the learner to observe and practice their
skills. Scaffolding, or supportive activities provided by
the educator, or peer that is on a higher skill level, to
support the student as he or she is led through the ZPD
(Mcleod, 2019) I have found this to be true in the
classroom, students that participation in cooperative and
work together to come to the correct solution. Research
shows that students learn best from their peers.
Geneva Gay), Culturally Responsive Teaches to
improve the school performance of underachieving
students of color. African, Asian, Latino, and Native
American students will perform better, on multiple
measures of achievement, when teaching is filtered
through their own cultural experiences and frames of
reference. Culturally responsive teaching include teacher
caring, teacher attitudes and expectations, formal and
informal multicultural curriculum, culturally informed
classroom discourse, and cultural congruity in teaching
and learning strategies. Building relationships with you
students is extremely important. Before you can teach a
student they need to develop trust with you. Teachers
should take the time and learn about the family history of
their students, so they can incorporate that into the
classroom community. Teachers need to make sure that
they’re culturally responsive things posted around the
classroom, such as themes for the bulletin boards,
celebrating the different holidays of the students in your
classroom, and integrating the students culture into the
curriculum. Researchers have found that culturally
responsive classrooms motivate students to learn. "The
essentials of this motivational framework are that it 1),
respect diversity; 2) engages the motivation of a broad
range of students; 3) create a
safe, inclusive, and respectful learning environment; 4)
derives teaching practices form across disciplines and
cultures; and 5) promotes equitable learning (Portland
State University website, 2019, ¶ 20). If students feel
safe and have that bond with their teacher they will be
more willing to learn in that classroom environment.
Like I stated before about my favorite teacher Mrs.
Herlan, she had good relationships with all of the
students in the building. Everyone loved her because she
had very strong built in relationships. So many times I
see teachers that don’t try to build that relationship with
their students. They often push students away once they
give them a hard time in class. I personally never wanted
to be one of those teachers and made she I took the time
to get to know every student that was in the classroom
that I was working in.
Conclusion
This portfolio is a reflection of artifacts that showcase
my coursework to becoming a teacher. This portfolio is
something that I will keep with me and update as my
experiences grow in this profession. I am a lifelong
learner, and as my skills improve I will always reflect
back on these artifacts to make sure that I am constantly
doing my best to service my students. In this
introduction I have included what I hope to convey in
this portfolio. I also have included certificates to
workshops and professional development opportunities ,
that showcases the
different strategies that I observed that other teachers use
in their classrooms. This is some of my best work from
the Masters of Science Elementary Education program
here at Medaille
College. There will be a variety of artifacts from this
program that show what I have learned during my time
at Medaille.