Reflection
Reflection
Reflection
Introduction
Putting together this portfolio has allowed me the opportunity to reflect on what it means
to be a great teacher. Creating an environment that is safe, warm, accessible and providing a
sense of belonging and community are some of the qualities I strive to demonstrate to my future
students. I am confident to say that my experience at Medaille has truly shaped me into the
strong, compassionate and effective teacher that I am today and solidified my desire to become a
professional educator. Continuing my education at this stage in life proves that I have a strong
desire to learn and continue to grow. I have a passion for education and my experience at
Medaille has enriched this passion and increased my desire to bring it to the classroom. In this
section I will be reflecting on my educational experience and how it has provided me with the
pedagogical skills to be a great teacher. This reflection will also show how my competencies and
qualifications are connected to the three primary claims to the Teacher Education Accreditation
Council (TEAC); To know the subject matter, to meet the needs of diverse learners through
effective pedagogy and best teaching practices and Medaille College graduates are caring
educators.
resulting in our entire learning experience making a shift from an in-class model to an online
platform. Although the educational experience shifted gears, I was able to collaborate with my
peers and professors in order to develop relationships outside of the classroom and adapt to this
new learning modality. This was a learning experience for me on how to adapt to unforeseeable
situations and make the best of it. I strived to work collaboratively and professionally with my
peers and obtain as much knowledge I could from the new digital learning experience. I was also
able to get academic support from many of my professors during this time and the ability to
adapt professionally and compassionately was directly modeled (TEAC Claim 3: Caring
Educator). As teachers, things often do not go as planned and the ability to main professionalism
I have taken various courses at Medaille with professors of such rich and diverse
backgrounds that have all helped guide and develop my own best practices teaching. I have
really valued putting this portfolio together and getting the opportunity to reflect on the plethora
experience, I am confident to say that I have developed a great deal of knowledge, theory and
best pedagogy practices from observing and learning from my professors (TEAC Claim 1:
miscommunication on which school we were to be at, that they best quality you can have as a
teacher is a sense of humor. This resonated with me. No matter what happens in life and in the
classroom, when the students have a teacher that can find the joy, a simple smile or the humor in
a situation, they will feel safe and a sense of belonging. I have learned to find peace and
calmness when things go wrong and how in stressful situations, like technology not working as
planned or presenting a lesson to a class virtually through an online platform, if you go at it with
a sense of humor, you can always find the joy in it (TEAC Claim 3: Caring Educator).
Throughout the various methods courses taken at Medaille, I was given the opportunity to
not only to present various classroom lessons on literacy, math and science but to write them as
well (TEAC Claims 1: Subject Matter; Claim 2: Pedagogy, Best Teaching Practices for Diverse
Learners). When I first looked over the task of writing a lesson plan, I felt that I would never
obtain the skills to produce a lesson plan with such detail. Now, with instructional support from
my methods professors, I can write them with such ease and confidence to know that I am
reaching students of all learning levels and capabilities while including accommodations that
meet all student’s needs. With careful planning, I have gained a sound knowledge on how to
apply Blooms’ taxonomy (1956) within my lesson objectives and target my questions to reach
higher order thinking among my students. This is a pedagogical skill that I did not have the first
day I walked into Medaille. While presenting elementary lessons to peers can at times be
difficult, this has been the most educational experience for me. I have learnt that I have an
engaging ability to present my lessons with creativity and motivation for my learners. The
feedback I have received has always been positive and encouraging that I am doing what I was
made to do. I have really developed the ability to learn my subject matter and go deeper to
educate myself on the content. I have also really enjoyed the constructive criticism and feedback
experiential learning practice, I was also able to gain classroom management skills. Although I
was not teaching directly to children, I was able to see what part of my lesson’s required more
management and review of rules and expectations then others. I was also able to gain insight into
finding students intrinsic motivation and building that into my lesson. One aspect of feedback I
have consistently received is my ability to engage with students and reinforce active
participation, active listening and attempts to learn in turn creating an increased sense of
participation (TEAC Claim 2: Pedagogy, Best Teaching Practices for Diverse Learners).
From taking methods courses in Math, Science and Social Studies, I have learned the
importance of teaching from the standards and developing lessons to hit cross curricular
standards and objectives. As demonstrated in my science lesson, I was able to make connections
from the New York State P-12 Learning Science Standards to the New York State Common
Core ELA Standards and the Ontario Curriculum Standards and embed components of all
During my early field experience course, I was able to examine the importance of
classroom management and develop my own tools that I will be able to utilize. I created a
classroom procedural tool that was designed to keep my classroom organized. I had various roles
such as Paper Passer, Line Leader, Caboose, etc. These roles were created in order to aid in the
flow of the classroom’s day to day activities while empowering the students and giving them
responsibilities. It was a large spin wheel. I had created clothespins with the students’ name on
them so that it could be easily manipulated to various roles. This tool is based off William
Glasser’s choice theory (1998) which identifies teachers as managers who need to work
effectively if they want to successfully teach their students. The role of teachers as managers
requires them to guide students in understanding that working hard and being obedient is worth it
and will have a positive influence on their lives. This is turn gives the students the ability to
make choices on their behaviour and act accordingly (TEAC Claim 2: Pedagogy, Best Teaching
During my Research in Education class, I was able to gain widespread research skills and
recognize the importance in action research in today’s classroom. I was given the opportunity to
complete a district/school board website review that gave me the professional knowledge about
researching demographics, the board’s mission and values and the standards that teachers are
evaluated on. This in turn, provided me with the skill set to examine other boards and districts
course gave me the hands-on experience to digitally learn and teach in today’s classroom. I was
fortunate to experience what it was like to be a full time student learning through a digital
modality. This course provided me with the insight on how to teach through such tools as a
google classroom, padlet, flipgrid and weebly and screencast-o-matic. I am now highly confident
in teaching through a digital platform. With technology in the classroom, it can now redefine
classroom objectives and the tools provided have guided me into best practice teaching (TEAC
Claims 1: Subject Matter; Claim 2: Pedagogy, Best Teaching Practices for Diverse Learners).
I believe that being a culturally responsive teacher is of the utmost importance in today’s
society. School climate and school culture play a large role in how student’s learning is
experiences and learning styles will not only enhance student learning but will provide a sense of
multiculturalism in the classroom and using it as a teaching tool helps to make an effective
teacher great (TEAC Claim 2: Pedagogy, Best Teaching Practices for Diverse Learners; Claim 3:
Caring Educator). By completing the Dignity for All Students Act Seminar, I was provided with
skills to identify and support students who are experiencing harassment, bullying and/or
discrimination. Moreover, this training provided me with extensive prevention strategies as well
as intervention strategies.
course was one of my favourites. This course allowed me to professionally share my knowledge
with my peers and help to engage them in critical thinking when it comes to students with special
needs. Every student is different and what works for one child does not always work for another.
Sharing ideas and working collaboratively with my colleagues was so inspiring to see the wealth
of knowledge that will be entering the teaching community. What I loved about this course was
the component of universal design for learning instruction. I cannot agree more with the idea that
making accommodations to instruction will benefit not only students who have an Individualized
Education Plan but the entire classroom. By meeting the needs of the widest range of students,
you will reduce the barriers to learning. This then allows students to learn in accordance with
their learning preference. The teacher is constantly creating alternative ways for students to both
receive and deliver information. This is how I foresee myself as a teacher, constantly assessing
and evaluating different instructional modalities to fit all the learners in the classroom (TEAC
Claims 1: Subject Matter; Claim 2: Pedagogy, Best Teaching Practices for Diverse Learners;
Claim 3: Caring Educator). I was also given the educational opportunity to complete an I.E.P
analysis. This was so beneficial for me as it gave me the skills to thoroughly comb through and
understand the individuality of each plan, recognizing that every student is different. Based off
Gardner’s (1983) multiple intelligence theory, examining each students’ strengths and needs and
using different modalities of instruction and accommodation, will help to empower learners and
During my assessment and evaluation of literacy course I was able to conduct a reading
assessment on a student and design a plan for instruction based off the results of my assessment.
This gave me the skills to recognize where the reader was at and what literacy strategies are
needed to support the learner. The first assessment that I implemented with the student was, the
Book Handling Knowledge Guidelines. The goal of this assessment was to measure the child’s
concepts of print. The second assessment I completed was a running record. Wanting to test for
phonological awareness, by using the identifying rhyming words assessment. Based on all these
assessments, I was able to conclude that this child was at the emergent reading stage.
Determining what background knowledge he had, and forming an instructional plan around the
results, shows how beneficial it can be for the student and the teacher. While doing these
assessments, I was also able to see where the student was challenged and when he began to shut
down. What I thought was interesting during this assessment, is how successful the child was
with a prompt. Although this was an assessment and prompts should not have taken place, this
informed me of how instruction can work. With instructional guidance, the student can be a
Students require a safe and secure environment where learning can take place. As a
teacher, setting up a supportive classroom to meet the needs of your students and provide safety
will not only make for a cohesive learning environment but a safe place for your students. I
believe based on my educational skills gained from the diverse courses at Medaille, I am ready to
become an elementary school teacher. I truly believe that creating a relationship with each
individual student is going to in turn develop a sense of mutual respect. Students with feel safe
when they know the teacher cares about their best interest and wants to continue to build the
relationship with them. When the teacher models respect, caring and compassion, it then is
expected in return.
I believe that it is important for students to have rules and responsibilities and learn that
there are classroom expectations within the classroom. If the rules are broken, there are
consequences. If the rules are followed, there are rewards. Thus, developing a sense of intrinsic
motivation within each student to show each other and the classroom respect. This would ideally
parent, I do this on the daily and it makes a huge difference in my children’s learning. When they
see vulnerability, they feel safe. It no longer becomes an ‘us versus you’ relationship, it is an ‘us
together’ relationship.
Building a sense of trust is important right off the bat. Letting your students make choices
and decisions is a great way for this to be done. What subject to do next, what project to do, book
to read or project to complete are some examples that students can be given choices to.
I believe it is important to talk about bullying in the classroom and teach a zero-tolerance
policy. It is important to teach empathy and emotional intelligence to students so that students
understand not only consequences to themselves but to others as well. By completing the Child
Abuse and School Violence and Prevention workshops offered through Medaille, it has helped to
gain this insight. It has also helped to set me up as a professional teacher who respects and abides
Conclusion
As I continue to learn and develop in my teaching abilities, I will continue to reflect upon
my practices and experiences. Continuously keeping a growth mindset will allow me to model
the ability to reflect and grow for myself and for my students. With proper planning,
the wings of each student and guiding them successfully into society to create and make magic of
their own happen. There is so much more to the role of a teacher then standing in front of the
class and lecturing. As it can be seen from my artifacts and my reflection, I am ready to take the