Spanish PDF
Spanish PDF
Spanish PDF
WORK SAMPLE
EMILY GONZÁLEZ
UTAH STATE UNIVERSITY
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION............................................................................................................... 4
TEACHING PHILOSOPHY ............................................................................................ 6
STUDENT TEACHING ................................................................................................... 8
LEARNING CONTEXT ................................................................................................ 9
FOCUS STUDENTS ..................................................................................................... 12
STUDENT TEACHING PORTFOLIO LESSON PLAN 1 ................................ 14
STUDENT TEACHING PORTFOLIO LESSON PLAN 2 ................................ 25
STUDENT TEACHING PORTFOLIO LESSON PLAN 3 ................................ 32
REFLECTION AND EVALUATION OF THE LESSONS................................ 48
SELF OBSERVATION ................................................................................................. 49
ADDITIONAL LESSON PLANS .................................................................................. 50
ADDITIONAL LESSON PLAN 1 ............................................................................. 51
ADDITIONAL LESSON PLAN 2 ............................................................................. 57
ADDITIONAL LESSON PLAN 3 ............................................................................. 61
ADDITIONAL LESSON PLAN 4 ............................................................................. 66
CLASSROOM OBSERVATIONS .................................................................................. 74
SUPERVISOR OBSERVATIONS.............................................................................. 75
CLASSROOM OBSERVATION 1 ............................................................................. 79
CLASSROOM OBSERVATION 2 ............................................................................. 81
PEER OBSERVATION ................................................................................................ 84
PICTURE FILES ............................................................................................................... 86
CARACTERÍSTICAS FÍSICAS ................................................................................. 87
DÍAS FESTIVOS............................................................................................................ 91
FINAL THOUGHTS ........................................................................................................ 98
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INTRODUCTION
To whom it may concern:
This portfolio contains samples of the work I have done as part of Professor María
Escalante-Spicer’s Teaching Modern Languages course at Utah State University and student
teaching at InTech Collegiate High School. The first item it contains is a brief statement
explaining my teaching philosophy which is based upon personal research, experience, and
observations with the Communicative Language Teaching (CLT) methodology. This is
followed by a background of InTech High School and three consecutive lesson plans from a
unit I taught while student teaching. Each lesson is followed by a detailed rationale for the
methods used, the target vocabulary, the required materials and their justification,
accommodations made, and finally the assessment used. Next, I have included additional
sample lesson plans as examples of some of my other work.
The last part of my teaching portfolio includes teaching observations I did during
clinicals and a picture file to represent the types of images I use within my classroom to
enhance language comprehension. In the classroom observations, I discuss the elements I
liked about the class and some of the things I would change to promote higher student
engagement.
Emily González
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TEACHING PHILOSOPHY
People often believe that if you speak a second language then that automatically means
you are able to teach it to another person, but nothing could be further from the truth.
Language teaching is a detailed process that requires careful preparation and scaffolding
to promote genuine communication in the classroom. Without genuine communication,
students leave class knowing and remembering nothing more than the material from their most
recent exam. From my experience both as a learner and a teacher, I have come to support the
Communicative Language Teaching (CLT) methodology.
In the CLT classroom, teacher and student participate in genuine language scenarios. In
contrast to the traditional language classroom, the focus of the class is on meaning and not
grammar. Grammar is taught only as a means to being able to complete the daily
predetermined objective. The teacher speaks and encourages the students to speak Spanish
100% of the time. This allows students to be exposed to a genuine language model. In order for
this to be feasible, the teacher provides language input in a comprehensible manner by using
images to support what is being said and using effective pausing, gestures, and repetition to
emphasize and clarify meaning. This method helps students be prepared to speak Spanish
outside of the classroom. With the CLT method, teachers become architects and students
become the builders of their language acquisition. Teachers come prepared with a lesson,
serve as a resource, and guide student learning. Students, in contrast, take initiative and
responsibility in their own learning by coming prepared to participate in the class, ask
questions, negotiate the meaning of new words and concepts, and utilize their resources.
The options in the CLT classroom are endless. As long as the activities planned are
student centered, have a meaningful exchange of information, and are guided by a
predetermined set of steps, students are able to see success in their language journey.
The most important objective for me as a teacher is to provide my students with real word
language application so they can foster an appreciation and love for other cultures and
languages. The days of dry grammar lectures are phasing out, and I believe there is a pressing
need for class time to be spent towards building language competency.
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STUDENT TEACHING
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LEARNING CONTEXT
School district: Intech Collegiate High School
Name of school: Intech Collegiate High School
Demographics of school:
Enrollment 179
The majority of students who attend InTech Collegiate High School are Cache Valley
teens (grades 9-12) who seek to study in the STEM field or to gain access to early college
opportunities. InTech is ranked the best school in Utah and is one of the 150 top ranked
high schools in the United States. The school itself is located in a building rented from Utah
State University which promotes a high quality of academic performance. Their success is
made possible through the combination of small class sizes and passionate qualified
instructors and administration. Parents, teachers, and students work hand in hand to meet
the needs of the students. Parents are encouraged to maintain communication with the
teachers, and teachers in return work collaboratively with the director and counselors. If any
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academic or behavioral issues arise, teachers first work with the student and when needed
seek help from the counselors, director, and parents.
Students are expected to come to each class prepared to participate and learn.
Their attendance is marked by the teacher, but the school’s office takes care of any frequent
absenteeism and tardiness. If the teacher notices any behavioral, emotional, or attendance
issues she makes contact with either the secretary, the counselor, or the director. Students do
not have a seating chart and are often moved around to complete communication based
language activities. Students are constantly involved in note taking and practicing the
target language. The learning environment is physically and emotionally safe as the teacher
encourages and guides her students.
With IEPs: NA
Students who receive speech/language services:
o Student 1 has no record of speech and language services on her file, but has a
mild lisp and stutter when she speaks. After mentioning my concerns to
InTech’s Special Education representative, student 1 now receives speech
therapy through a specialist.
English language learners: NA
Gifted and talented: NA
Other (e.g., 504 plans--please specify):
o Student 2 experiences high levels of stress and anxiety on a regular basis, and as
such has a 504 plan. He is emotionally behind the rest of his peers and is
currently being tested by the Special Education Specialist for a disability. His
accommodations include providing extra time on assignments as needed and a
quiet location with extra physical space in the classroom.
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Students’ prior knowledge for these lessons:
The majority of students in Spanish One have no previous Spanish background except
for one student whose parents are native Spanish speakers. This student cannot read or write
in Spanish and his speaking is comparable to his peers who had no previous exposure to
Spanish before taking this course.
Spanish One is the precursor course to the concurrent enrollment Spanish course
taught through one of Utah State University’s own instructors within the walls of Intech. This
class is designed to motivate students to take the CE Spanish class, interest them in the
Spanish language, and expose them to basic Spanish. Some of these students are motivated
by the opportunity for college credit, while others are motivated by the subject itself. Most
students didn’t begin the course with high motivation or interest in Spanish, but with time have
developed these desires. Knowing my students’ background reestablishes the need for
high energy lessons with purpose. They didn’t take the class because they had a strong desire
to learn all the grammar rules, rather they took the class to build skills. As I plan my lessons I
am sure to design them with a purpose outside of the language. For example, instead of
teaching a grammar rule and having them write random sentences using this rule, they
participate in a real life scenario that supports communication and builds skills. Students
also highly benefit from modeling the activities (as pictured below).
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FOCUS STUDENTS
Description of focus student 1:
Focus student 1 has no background in the Spanish language and is a true first time
language learner. Academically, she maintains B grades. After a few weeks of observation, I
have found that she is easily frustrated and quickly gives up or is distracted by her drawing
notebook when she doesn’t understand the material. She puts in the least amount of work
needed to achieve the daily goal and does not like to communicate at the presentation or
interpersonal level in the target language. When individually prompted, she will eventually do
as instructed, but it is done at a significantly slower rate than her peers. Also, there have been
a few occasions in which she has raised her voice with my mentor teacher when put on the spot.
I believe this comes from an insecurity with the material.
Focus student 1 is a white non-Hispanic female who comes from a traditional nuclear
family. Other than with one particular friend in the class, she is social reserved with her peers.
No other relevant characteristics or information has been gathered.
Keeping my personal observations in mind, I strategically group and interact with focus
student 1 so she is able participate to the fullest degree. When students are involved in
communicative activities with their peers, I frequently pair and group them with students
outside of their friend groups. When focus student 1 is given the opportunity to work with
peers outside of her comfort zone and at a table away from her drawing materials, she is able to
stay on task. On the instructional side of learning, I always model activities, give oral and
written directions, and when needed, individual explanations and conversation setups. When
giving directions, I am careful to watch focus student 1 and gauge her comprehension by her
facial and body language. During activities, I always take the time to check student 1’s work,
on task behavior, and answer individual questions.
In contrast to focus student 1, focus student 2 had previous exposure to Spanish before
attending Spanish One at InTech. As a child, she attended school in a Spanish-English dual
language setting. Also, her father served an LDS mission in Colombia and serves as an extra
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language resource outside of school. Academically, focus student 2 is a straight A student who
constantly elicits additional target language vocabulary, fully participates, and performs at a
high level. For example, during our restaurant lesson she requested words like “sautéed” and
“steamed” when writing her menu while other students wrote the minimal vocabulary needed.
She is genuinely interested in learning Spanish and is always looking for ways to expound upon
her learning. Recently, she even invited her dad to be a guest speaker during our Latin-
American countries and culture unit.
Focus student 2 is also a white non-Hispanic female who comes from a traditional
nuclear family. From what I have gathered from parent teacher conferences and one-on-one
conversations with her, she has a healthy and supportive home life. It is not rare to hear a
story about things happening in her life at home. Focus student 2 also works quickly and
effectively with others when needed and is willing to help her classmates who struggle with the
material. No other pertinent background information has been gathered.
Focus student 2 reminds me of the need to help students at all levels of learning and not
just the ones who are behind or even those who learn at the average pace. She occasionally
becomes bored because she finishes her activities quicker than her peers. When this happens I
will speak to her in the target language about the activity to give her extra practice with a
fluent speaker. Also, I strategically use her in class by pairing her with students who don’t
work well with groups. This allows her the opportunity to process the language from a
different angle as she leads and teaches her peers. This also increases the productivity of her
classmates.
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STUDENT TEACHING PORTFOLIO LESSON PLAN 1
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Activity 3: Presentation of a Plate of Food
Time Allotment: 10 min
Materials: PowerPoint, markers, whiteboards, and tissues
Procedure:
1. Teacher will present an image of a full meal that includes a dessert, a drink, a main
dish, a side dish, and the needed utensils while describing each item and its
category.
2. Teacher will present six more similar images and ask students questions like ¿Cuál
es la comida principal? ¿Cuáles son las comidas adicionales? ¿Cuáles son las
verduras? ¿Cuál es la bebida? ¿Cuáles utensilios necesitas para comer esta comida?
for each image. Students will write their answers on their whiteboards and show
them to the teacher. Teacher will announce the possible answers and how to spell
them as needed.
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Rationale for methods:
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VOCABULARY
Los postres Los condimentos Los utensilios Las categorías de
comida
La tartaleta La sal El vaso Las verduras
El pastel / La torta La pimiento La cuchara Las frutas
El helado La crema de maní El tenedor Los condimentos
Las galletas La miel El cuchillo La carne
Los churros El aderezo El plato hondo La comida principal
El rol de canela La mostaza El plato La comida adicional
La paleta de leche La mayonesa La taza Los postres
La paleta de hielo El queso La servilleta
PowerPoint
o PowerPoint is used to provide visual representations of the target vocabulary,
provide a backbone to the lesson, and to provide a secondary medium for
instructions. The whole lesson is guided by the PowerPoint.
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Mini whiteboards, markers, and tissues
o Students are provided whiteboards, dry erase markers, and a tissue for erasing
so they can all actively be involved in the lesson while the teacher does
comprehension checks.
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Vocab picture sheets
o Students are provided a printed page with the target food vocabulary so they
can take notes alongside the images without having to translate. This
supports direct language processing and the use of the target language.
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Adaptations/accommodations:
Most of the accommodations made in my lesson plan are both implicit and explicit and
benefit everyone in the class. As this is a language class, everyone in the room is a second
language learner, if not a third language learner so the structure in and of itself is based to meet
contextual and group needs. These accommodations serve ELLs, students with disabilities, and
students with behavioral challenges. Below are some of the implicit and explicit
accommodations my lessons will cultivate.
Students are organized into small groups to encourage peer interaction and group
work. This benefits Spanish language learners, ELLs who are learning Spanish, and
ELLs who already speak Spanish because it gives them the chance to be the expert
and help their group.
The use of repetition, images, and modeling. The combination of these practices
provides a visual, audial, and practice element to new vocabulary that helps everyone
process the language through multiple modems and levels. In particular, student 1
benefits from having the vocabulary repeated multiple times and having the
opportunity to vocalize it as a class because identifying sound nuances are difficult for
her.
A consistent lesson structure is used each class to set expectations and give the class
direction and organization. Routine is essential for students with behavioral
challenges.
The mode of assessment and language correction is done in a low risk fashion
allowing students to have low affective filters. Instead of correcting student language
errors by saying “nope, try it again” the teacher simply uses methods such as recast.
If the error consistently persists then a more explicit manner will be used to explain
to the whole class. Summative assessments will be done at the end of the unit at both
a verbal and nonverbal level across multiple modalities. (Group presentation, written
test, reflection papers, community involvement, etc)
As mentioned earlier, student 2 experiences high levels of anxiety when working in
groups. To best meet his needs, he is carefully placed with students willing to
work with him and the teacher strategically spends more time with student 2
during work time so he feels supported.
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Assessment:
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STUDENT TEACHING PORTFOLIO LESSON PLAN 2
EL SÁNDWICH
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Objetive: Purpose:
Students can write a grocery list for a Students will practice basic shopping skills
sandwich and request the ingredients at through the exchange of meaning with
the “supermercado”. their classmates.
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Activity 3: Brain Storming
Time Allotment: 20 min
Materials: PowerPoint, markers, whiteboards, and tissues
Procedure:
1. In groups of two or three, students will be assigned an area of the supermarket (i.e.
área de verduras, la carnicería, etc) and will write a list of the food that could be
purchased there based on the unit vocabulary from previous lessons on a single mini
whiteboard.
2. Each group will share their list with the rest of the class. (DO NOT ERASE
whiteboards)
3. In the same groups, students will write the grocery list for a sandwich of their
choice on a different whiteboard.
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Rationale for methods:
This lesson plan is taught with the Communicative Language Teaching methodology
because of its task based focus, group work, and presentation modes. According to linguists J.
Lee and B. VanPatten students must be able to communicate in the introspective,
interpersonal, and presentational modes of the target language (Spanish). This lesson
allows students to access all three types of communication as they internalize the vocabulary,
work in small groups, and finally present their sandwiches. In their groups, students work
creatively together and negotiate the meaning of the vocabulary as they categorize and
identify their meaning in context.
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Required materials, resources, and technology:
PowerPoint
o PowerPoint is used to provide visual representations of the target
vocabulary, provide a backbone to the lesson, and to provide a secondary
medium for instructions. The whole lesson is guided by the PowerPoint.
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Mini whiteboards, markers, and tissues
o Students are provided whiteboards, dry erase markers, and a tissue for erasing
so they can all actively be involved in the lesson while the teacher does
comprehension checks.
Paper and pencil
o Students will use a paper and a pencil to write the ingredients to their favorite
food. Applying the vocabulary terms through writing provides students
with another medium to memorize and access the target language.
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Adaptations/accommodations:
As with all comprehensible language input in this classroom, the teacher will utilize
purposeful pausing, gestures, intonation, images, and repetition to help all
language learners process the new information. This is helpful for everyone, but in
particular this helps students with processing disabilities and behavioral disorders
because it provides order and breaks down the material to a comprehensible level.
Student 1 will benefit from this adaption.
English language learners in a Spanish class would most likely be native Spanish
speakers. To enrich their classroom experience, I would use them to model the
communicative activity and as a language resource for their classmates. There are no
students enrolled in this class to use as a native speaking language model.
For students who may use a wheel chair or have difficulty moving around to do the
interviews, the teacher will guide other students to them so they can actively
participate without feeling left out or restricted.
For students who may have difficulty writing and drawing due to a physical motor skill
disability, the teacher will allow this student to use their laptop to create their lists
or put them in a group where they won’t have to scribe their own answers.
For students who may have ADHD or another behavioral disability that inhibits them
from staying on task, the teacher will give clear verbal instructions, written
instructions, and take special care to monitor and guide student’s behavior during
the activity.
Assessment:
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o After each presentation of new concepts and vocabulary the teacher will use
mini whiteboards to gauge student comprehension by asking questions in the
target language and eliciting a written response. This information will
inform the teacher what concepts need to be covered in more detail, and which
ones students have mastered.
Daily “tareas” (formal formative)
o Each day students will have a written “tarea” incorporated through the lesson.
These written assignments range from filling out a graphic organizer through
information gap activities and interviews, as well as original short and extended
drawings and writing pieces. This lesson involves turning in and presenting
a labeled sandwich as a group.
Written Test (formal summative)
o At the end of this unit students will take an online test through the course
canvas page. This test will include a mixture of true or false, multiple choice,
fill in the blank, and short essay questions. The questions are designed to
gauge student recognition, memorization, and application of the target
vocabulary used to meet the daily unit objectives.
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STUDENT TEACHING PORTFOLIO LESSON PLAN 3
EL RESTAURANTE
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Objetive: Purpose:
Students can create a menu and place an Students will be exposed to and practice
order at a restaurant as a client and take an Spanish in a real world restaurant setting.
order as a server.
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Activity Three: Directions and Restaurant Scene Examples
Time Allotment: 15 minutes
Materials: PowerPoint, YouTube
Procedure:
1. Teacher will play an example of a scene at a restaurant. Teacher will instruct
students that they will be playing the part of the waiter and guest in a similar
manner to the scene. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jV89vs9k1wQ (5
minutes)
2. Teacher will provide sentence starters and an outline dialog to follow. Teacher will
explain the graphic organizer and model the dialog. Teacher will ask
comprehension questions to gauge student comprehension. (Ex: ¿Qué es la primera
cosa que hacemos? ¿La segunda? ¿La tercera?) (10minutes)
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Rationale for methods:
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Required materials, resources, and technology:
YouTube
o In this lesson students will watch and example scene from a restaurant.
Models and examples help set student expectations and provide
directions. Here is the link to the video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jV89vs9k1wQ
PowerPoint
o PowerPoint is used to provide visual representations of the target vocabulary,
provide a backbone to the lesson, and to provide a secondary medium for
instructions. The whole lesson is guided by the PowerPoint.
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Mini whiteboards, markers, and tissues
o Students are provided whiteboards, dry erase markers, and a tissue for erasing
so they can all actively be involved in the lesson while the teacher does
comprehension checks.
Paper and colored pencils
o Students will use a paper and a pencil to create to their menu. This motivates
student engagement and promotes creativity. Also, applying the vocabulary
terms through writing provides students with another medium to
memorize and access the target language.
Graphic Organizer
o Graphic organizers not only give students direction and purpose for
communication activities, but holds them responsible for those activities. In
this lesson students are able to write the menu items their customers order.
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Las Ordenes
Persona La bebida La entrada La comida La comida El postre
principal adicional
Maestra G. Agua Papas fritas Hamburguesa Ensalada Helado
Adaptations/accommodations:
As with all comprehensible language input in this classroom, the teacher will utilize
purposeful pausing, gestures, intonation, images, and repetition to help all
language learners process the new information. This is helpful for everyone, but in
particular this helps students with processing disabilities and behavioral disorders
because it provides order and breaks down the material to a comprehensible level. This
accommodation supports student 1.
Teacher will provide verbal instructions, written instructions on the board, and
present an example of a finished menu. This will help students with processing
disorders organize their thoughts, people who have low eyesight be able to read the
material, as well as help everyone in the class stay on track.
Students with presentation anxiety are able to use group work to distribute the
responsibility. This allows everyone to participate, yet find comfort and support in a
difficult task for many teens.
Take home time. Students who need extra time to work on their menus can do so
after school with the help of the teacher, or can take them home if they feel that they
need to.
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Assessment:
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FINAL EXAM
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REFLECTION AND EVALUATION OF THE LESSONS
Analyze student learning:
Focus student 1 scored 49 out of 50 on the final summative written exam. Her
engagement during this unit was surprisingly better than her normal work effort. During
each lesson I involved elements of drawing. This helped to engage the student and keep her on
task. Even though I saw higher levels of processing than usual, focus student 1 still had
difficulty producing the target language. When given instructions in the target language,
she asks her peers in English what to do because of a lack of understanding. In the future,
I plan to involve more drawing and to promote student production of the target language with
an award system or competition. This will motivate not only this student, but her peers to
move from the word level during communicative tasks to the sentence level.
Focus student 2 also scored a 49 out of 50 on the final summative written exam
even though she was absent twice during this unit. As mentioned in the focus student analysis
section, focus student 2 is a highly engaged learner who requests additional vocabulary in
the target language. For example, during the “el sándwich” lesson she asked for the word
“grains” in Spanish even though it wasn’t on the target vocabulary list. Throughout this unit
she gave great attention to detail to the spelling and use of accents during the written
portion of the assignments, as well as tried to speak the target language with her
currently limited vocabulary. As with all students, she has her moments of confusion with
directions, when this happened I just reworded my explanation and modeled it with more
clarity. By modeling with clarity I will be able to help all of my students succeed.
“La comida” unit has been one of the most successful units I have taught due to its
concrete nature and because it is a high interest topic for many students. Before teaching each
lesson, I carefully prepared a PowerPoint and written lesson plan to provide structure
and flow to the class. At times, I underestimated or overestimated the time students would
take on activities as well as misjudged their complexity. When this happened, I had extra
material planned to compensate for time or ready to give greater detail to the lesson. The
main item I would change for the future would be to include production of the language on
the summative exam to reflect a more accurate representation of student performance.
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SELF OBSERVATION
Date: January 26, 2018
Language/Level taught: Spanish One
Lesson: El restaurante
1. What I liked:
The PowerPoint was well structured and prepared so there was no need to
constantly refer back to a lesson plan while teaching.
The use of an iclicker for moving slides allowed me to move around and engage
with the students.
During this lesson I made an effort to speak slower and clearer so students could
hear individual sounds. This is something I am still working on, but it was an
improvement from the previous classes I have given.
2. General Comments/Recommendations:
I need to learn how to recognize the signs of emotional breakdowns before they
happen!
I need to engage and energize students during the vocabulary comprehension
checks because they were very tired and disconnected during the first 20
minutes of the lesson.
I need to enforce students to speak in the target language during work time.
During the restaurant rotation activity, I should have used a timer on the screen
so students would rotate at the same pace instead of having to wait for the
person before them to finish.
I do a good job of monitoring students’ on task behavior, but I need to be better
at listening what they are saying in Spanish and finding common errors to go
over with them at the end of class.
3. GOALS:
Encourage the use of Spanish during work time.
Increase engagement during comprehension checks.
Address common errors students make.
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ADDITIONAL LESSON PLANS
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ADDITIONAL LESSON PLAN 1
LESSON OVERVIEW
This lesson plan is designed to allow beginning language learners to use Spanish in a
real world situation in which they are conveying feelings of well wishes in the oral and written
form. The lesson is structured in a five step sequence that guides students to meet the daily
objective of being able to “write a greeting card with a predetermined audience and
holiday.” Each step (activity) is essential to gaining and reflecting over new vocabulary and
concepts needed to achieve the objective. In the first activity (warm-up) students are taught
the names of common holidays in Spanish through the use of images, purposeful gesturing,
pausing, and repetition. The second activity is designed to gauge how well students processed
the new information by requiring them to fill in the gap (answering questions). The third
activity directs students to use a graphic organizer to identify the audience and holiday of
some example greeting cards. This process allows them to think about the distinguishing
elements between holidays. In the fourth activity students are able to create a greeting card
as a partnership with a determined audience and holiday. In the fifth activity students go a
step further and present the card of a neighboring group. Through these carefully aligned
steps students are able to complete a genuine real world task in Spanish.
In order for students to be able fully participate in this lesson they would need to have
had some exposure or a unit concerning different types of audiences (i.e. family members,
community members, etc). Students would also need ample support filling out the graphic
organizer as some of the greeting cards may contain words not easily captured by a picture.
The teacher will need to be very observant and involved to keep the students in the target
language (Spanish) and to serve as a resource during the fourth activity.
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TARJETAS DE LOS DÍAS FESTIVOS
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Objetive: Purpose:
Students can write a greeting card with a Students will communicate feelings of well
predetermined holiday and audience. wishes in a written and verbal form in a
real world setting.
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Activity 3: Introduce Greeting Cards
Time Allotment: 10 min
Materials: Greeting card examples (PowerPoint), graphic organizer
Procedure:
1. Teacher will introduce real life greeting card examples by showing pictures of them
on PowerPoint.
2. Teacher will model the activity by asking the students what holiday and audience
would correspond with the first card on the board.
3. As pairs, students will review each greeting card and determine the holiday and
audience by filling out a graphic organizer.
4. Teacher will model the following activity by making a greeting card in front of the
class.
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Graphic Organizer for Activity 3
One
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Two
Three
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Four
Five
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ADDITIONAL LESSON PLAN 2
LESSON OVERVIEW
This second lesson is a follow up to the first lesson in the portfolio because it builds
upon the vocabulary and tone set around sending cards. Now that students know how to write
a greeting card they must be able to send it. In the first activity students review the essential
vocabulary from the day before, and then are exposed to the new essential vocabulary
regarding sending a letter or card through the mail. The second activity again gauges the
comprehension of students through questions. The third activity models and requires
students to locate the key elements in a “ready to send letter”. In the fourth and fifth activity
students work together to ready an envelope and send their cards through the model mail box.
Each of the activities support the culminating objective to be able to send a greeting card.
In order for students to smoothly participate in this lesson they would need to have had
exposure to the number system, the alphabet, and dictating addresses. With this base they are
able to intake the new vocabulary and concepts with the guided support of the teacher.
Though carefully constructed, this activity still needs to be carefully guided by a teacher to
keep the students in the target language and to ensure they complete each sub step –especially
in activity four.
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EL CORREO
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Objetive: Purpose:
Students can mail a holiday greeting card Students will acquire the vocabulary and
to their chosen audience. practice of sending mail in a real world
situation in Spanish.
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Activity 3: Introduce “ready to send letters”
Time Allotment: 10 min
Materials: PowerPoint, ready (return address, mailing address, stamp, letter, etc) and non-
ready (missing a stamp and address) letter examples, and graphic organizer
Procedure:
1. Teacher will model “ready to mail” vs. “non-ready” to mail letters by comparing the
differences between the two.
2. Teacher will use PowerPoint to display 5 different letters/envelopes with some
missing information. As pairs, students will use a graphic organizer to tally the
present information and decide whether or not each letter is ready to be mailed.
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ADDITIONAL LESSON PLAN 3
LESSON OVERVIEW
This lesson plan is designed to allow beginning language learners to use Spanish in a
real world situation as they become familiarized with traveling situations and use their
persuasion skills to convince their classmates to visit the Spanish speaking country they
present.
The lesson is structured in a five activity sequence that guides students to meet the
daily objective of being able to “create a brochure for a Spanish speaking country and
present it through roleplaying a tourist and a travel agent.” Each step (activity) is essential
to gaining and reflecting over new vocabulary and concepts needed to achieve the objective. In
the first activity (warm-up) students review past vocabulary for clothing items through a total
physical response (TPR) based activity. The second activity continues to review vocabulary
and adds on new verbs needed for the culminating activity. The third activity is an interview
check list designed to apply the recently learned verbs. In the fourth activity, students are
finally able to create a brochure in a partnership. Now that students have had the opportunity
to hear, read, and write with the new vocabulary and concepts, they can be successful in the
fifth activity. In the fifth activity students must persuade their classmates to visit the
destination of their brochure while playing the role of a travel agent and tourist.
In order to be successful with this lesson, students must be familiar with basic clothing
vocabulary, high interest activity verbs, the seasons, and basic expressions of weather. As a
culminating lesson for a traveling unit, this lesson will require students to draw upon
previously learned language.
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EL FOLLETO
iN
Objetive: Purpose:
Students can create a brochure for a Students will become familiarized with
Spanish speaking country and present it traveling situations and persuade their
through roleplaying a tourist and a travel peers to visit the country they present.
agent.
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Activity 3: INTERVIEWS
Time Allotment: 15 min
Materials: PowerPoint, graphic organizer, and writing utensils
Procedure:
1. Teacher will model the next activity by using the needed graphic organizer and
asking individual students questions like, “¿Descansas los sábados?” o “¿Te gusta
escalar montañas?”. If the student says yes, she will put a check mark in the
correlating box.
2. Students will have 5 to 7 minutes to interview at least three classmates.
3. Teacher will review the activity by asking comprehension questions to the class
like, “¿A quién le gusta correr?” o “¿Quién nada los lunes?”. Students who answer
will receive a point for their partnership.
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Activity 5: ROLE PLAY INTERVIEWS
Time Allotment: 20 min
Materials: PowerPoint, graphic organizer, original “folleto”, and visible timer
Procedure:
1. Teacher will model an example exchange between a tourist and a travel agent.
2. One student from each group will stand up and rotate to the different groups as a
potential tourist with the graphic organizer. The student sitting down will explain
their “folleto” to the tourist. The tourist will record the information and ask any
extra needed questions. Teacher will set a timer; students may not advance until
the timer goes off.
3. Once students finish one rotation, they will switch spots with their partner and
repeat the activity in the new role.
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Mis actividades (Graphic Organizer for Activity 3)
La persona Tú 1 2 3 4 5
¿Nadas los lunes?
¿Cocinas los martes y jueves?
¿Corres los viernes?
¿Estudias los lunes y miércoles?
¿Descansas los sábados?
¿Te gusta escalar montañas?
¿Te gusta ir a la playa?
¿Te gusta ir de campamento?
¿Te gusta ir de compras?
¿Te gustar dar un paseo?
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ADDITIONAL LESSON PLAN 4
LESSON OVERVIEW
This lesson plan is from the last supervisor observed lesson of my student teaching. As
with all my previous observations, I sent a copy to my supervisor so she could review my
lesson plan and give me feedback before I gave the lesson. I was happy with the lesson plan I
sent her, but after collaborating, I was able to develop a product I was even more please with.
With her recommendations I was able to take what I had and convert it into something more
communicative for my students. Instead of keeping my students at the word level I was
able to challenge them to communicating at the sentence level. By the end of the class
they were able to write in the target language at the paragraph length.
The lesson is structured in a five activity sequence that guides students to meet the
daily objective “Students can make a written request for a special animal to increase their
collection as if they were a zoo director.” Each step (activity) is essential to gaining and
reflecting over new vocabulary and concepts needed to achieve the objective. In the first
activity students review past vocabulary for animal names and verbs my playing a whiteboard
game in teams. The second activity utilizes categorization of animal flashcards to apply and
learn different ways to describe animals. The third activity brings students to the word level
as they use their flashcards in an information gap activity. In the fourth activity, students
write a request for a special animal to increase their collection as if they were a zoo director.
Now that students have been carefully guided through the needed vocabulary and phrases, they
can be successful in the fifth activity. In the fifth activity students use the target language to
exchange zoo animals based on their “zoo”.
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LOS ANIMALES
iN
Objetive: Purpose:
Students can make a written request for a Students will exercise interpersonal,
special animal to increase their collection presentational, and written communication
as if they were a zoo director. in Spanish while learning about animals.
Activity 2: Categorizing
Time Allotment: 20 min
Materials: PowerPoint, whiteboards, dry erase markers, tissues for erasing, and flashcards
Procedure:
1. Teacher will provide comprehensible input by describing the different “types” of
animals (i.e. mammals, birds, etc.). (4 min)
3. Teacher will test student comprehension by showing a picture of an animal on the
PP. Students will answer on their whiteboards as in Activity 1. (4 min)
4. Teacher will hand out animal flashcards. In pairs, students will organize their
flashcards into groups based on their own criteria (i.e. by color, size, where they live,
what they eat, etc.). Teacher will ask students how they decided to group them and
what animals they put in each group. Teacher will provide the words needed. (7 min)
5. Teacher will present an additional 5 categories (i.e. where they live, their skin,
physical characteristics, etc.) she thought of by showing images and providing
comprehensible input. (5 min)
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Activity 3: Animal Observations (Information Gap Activity)
Time Allotment: 25 min
Materials: PowerPoint and animal flashcards
Procedure:
1. Teacher will model the animal observation activity by posting guiding questions on
the screen and holding a flashcard up to her head and asking the class the questions
and eliciting an answer. For example, she would ask “¿En dónde vive mi animal?”
and students would say, “en el mar” or “en el campo”. Little by little she would
narrow down the choices until she could make a guess. (5 min)
2. Teacher will split the students into partnerships. Students will flip their deck of
flashcards upside down and do the modeled activity with their partner one card at a
time. (20 min)
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STUDENT WORK EXAMPLES
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CLASSROOM OBSERVATIONS
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SUPERVISOR OBSERVATIONS
Below I have included the summary from each of my official supervisor observations.
SUPERVISOR OBSERVATION 1
Strengths:
Her energy, enthusiasm, and personality are a plus in this classroom. She looks very
comfortable in front of the classroom and she is in control the entire class period.
She took into consideration my suggestions to make her lesson plan more effective before
and while teaching.
Ss are familiar with the class dynamics, and they followed her directions very well. I
highlighted this when talking with the other STs who were observing her; “It takes a
minute to notice if the teacher has implemented some strategies because Ss’ reactions to
the activities tell us if they are or they are not familiar with the activity”.
Her Power Point was very well organized, and she presented the different steps very well.
In addition, she created a very nice video to model one of the activities in a restaurant. Ss
seemed to enjoy it very much.
She had an excellent control of content and time (90 minutes).
You can include a Think, Pair, and Share activity to get Ss food preferences & “¿Cuáles
son las comidas principales?’
Show the Menú you created in the PPT in addition to physically have it. This way, Ss can
have a clearer idea of what you want them to do. It was a little bit difficult to see the
content from the distance.
I am looking forward to reading her self-reflection.
Summary of performance:
The Cooperating Teachers, with whom Emily has worked very closely, informed that
Emily has been in charge of the class since last week and she has created a very positive
atmosphere, in which Ss feel comfortable Spanish language.
It is important to mention that I have observed several times Emily and Marina Bernal
working together in the lesson plans when Emily is in our Department.
SUPERVISOR OBSERVATION 2
Strengths:
She changed the activity when she realized that Ss were not engaged!
TPF with eyes closed was very well done. This is something that she learned in my course
and I was very happy to see this in action .
Great ideas:
o To do an informal assessment using the WBs: ¿Qué te gusta hacer?
o To include the hand-outs in the PPT, so Ss can see what they have to do
o To review Vocabulario in context!
In spite of the fact that there were only 8 Ss present, she was able to maintain all of them
engaged
She incorporated the suggestions made when she sent the lesson plan!
As previously mentioned, her energy, enthusiasm, and personality are a plus in this
classroom. In fact, while walking to her classroom, I was addressed by one of the teachers
at Intech and she told me how happy they are with Emily. She said that the previous
night, Emily had been very helpful translating for Hispanic parents during the meeting
held at the school. She literally said: “we love her and Ss love her too!
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Areas for improvement:
It would be a good idea if you try to present the Objective for the day in Spanish. Your CT
told me that she does it in Spanish. I am sure that your Ss will be very responsive to that.
Otherwise, they may have the idea that Spanish is not important because the objectives
are still in English
Summary of performance:
Emily González (Woodbrey) delivered a perfect class! She was always in control, with a
big smile and she seemed very comfortable in front of the classroom. It is clear that she belongs
to the classroom! Her continual effort in creating activities to engage Ss makes her teaching very
rewarding and pleasant. All activities are not only connected but they also have a clear objective.
Nothing in this class is a waste of time or busy-work. She designs activities that allow Ss reach
communicative tasks.
SUPERVISOR OBSERVATION 3
Strengths:
Summary of performance:
Emily displays great confidence in front of the classroom. She is a very effective teacher
who knows how to interact with Ss and how to make them feel comfortable using the L2. She
perfectly manages content and time. In addition, she knows how to deliver comprehensible input
and how to scaffold Ss to fulfill the different communicative tasks. I am sure that she will be a
great Spanish teacher at Alta High School, where she has been recently hired.
It was great to see how much Ss can do with the Spanish language in only one semester!
Some of the examples for today’s communicative goal had more than 50 words! I hope Emily
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includes some of these examples in her Portfolio/Teaching Work Sample. These will be
excellent examples of what Ss are able to do when taught appropriately.
During her S-Teaching, I have been very positively impressed with Emily’s teaching in
general. However, I would like to highlight two aspects of her teaching
The positive atmosphere that she has created in the classroom. Ss were very
participative and it was clear that they have enjoyed the class. Even when the bell
rang, they continued working in Spanish; they did not want to leave the classroom
The ability to improve the suggestions made. Today, for example, she connected
different activities toward the communicative goal make them more meaningful
for Ss (i/e., “Actividad con Tarjetas”)
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CLASSROOM OBSERVATION 1
Language / Level taught: Spanish 1A
Institution: Mountain Crest High School
Date: September 21, 2017
1. Components of the lesson, in order, with detail, in about 7-10 minute intervals:
Students started with a quiz on Canvas (Unidad 2 Exámen).
Continued quiz time. Those who finished early read comic books in Spanish.
In English, teacher transitioned into a verbal repetition of “a mí, a ti, etc”.
TPR based vocabulary introduction of human characteristics.
“La bienvenida” done by one student.
In English, teacher reviewed a previous poster assignment.
Teacher model of “¿Qué te gusta hacer… y por qué?”. Students repeated the
question in pairs.
Teacher introduced the game “Tira-Tarjetas-Tigres”.
Round 1 of the game.
Round 2 of the game.
Round 3 of the game.
2. What I liked:
The availability of Spanish reading materials (e.g. the comic books).
The alphabet letters posted on the wall in the classroom.
The use of “warning times” to transition activities.
Teacher thanked students for good behavior.
Teacher was very animated and engaged the whole lesson.
Questioned students to check learning progress.
Very well organized game transitions.
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3. What I would have done differently if I were the teacher
1. Spoke in Spanglish I would have spoken in full While breaking down words one
without correct code sentences during the game as well by one draws attention to new
switching and used as used tonally and physically vocabulary, native speakers in
one word statements emphasized full sentences during the real world do not speak that
instead of sentences. instructions. way. Students need sheltered,
but genuine input.
2. Hands out “quetzals” I would remove the fake money Passing out fake money takes a
(paper money) for reward system completely. lot of class time that can be
good behavior. Instead I would award students better utilized by focusing on
through their participation and language instead of handing
hard work in the means of a grade. papers out like candy.
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3. What I would have done differently if I were the teacher:
3. Teacher and students I would replace the class Once students are
recite a story time dedicated to exposed to the real
composed of memorizing and Spanish speaking world,
sentences that target reviewing the story with a memorize story will
current grammar and an authentic text that serve little to none as
vocab. As the year supports a communicative they try to
goes on the story gets goal. For example, in a communicate. If class
longer. Everyone food unit students can time is utilized with
memorizes this story read a recipe and then authentic and creative
vocally and physically have the chance to guide language, students will
(the actions) and play it someone else to make it, be better prepared for
out as a class. then later write their own the real world.
recipe.
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4. What I learned from doing this observation
Rote memorization is NOT the most effective use of time or of student interest.
o Students should be engaged in meaningful conversations that utilize the targeted
vocabulary –not memorizing something they can’t use outside of the classroom.
Students ARE capable of extended (paragraph) writing.
o While it is extremely important to keep students interactive and working together
vocally, they are internalizing the language and are capable of connecting written
ideas in paragraph form –even with little experience.
Students lose interest when they are provided too much time to work.
o When students are provided too much time to work on a prompt or communicative
activity it leads to boredom and speaking out of the target language. If they are
cut a little short they are still able to complete the goal (speaking
communicatively) without being as tempted to switch languages.
Students CAN understand what is NEEDED when only Spanish is spoken.
o With effective gesturing, images, pauses, repetition, and direct instruction students
are able to gain the knowledge they need to participate in class.
Peer work builds great relationships and purpose in a class.
o Language is all about communication. By using pair work all students are able
practice speaking the target language as well as get to know and work with their
peers –something expected of them in the work force.
It is essential to be an attentive and engaged teacher
o If students are not being held responsible or given a purpose for their speech they
will get off topic, get frustrated, and eventually not speak in the target language.
As a teacher it is important to be constantly engaged with students.
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PEER OBSERVATION
In addition to observing full time licensed teachers in the Spanish classroom, I also had
the unique opportunity to observe my fellow student teachers. These observations allowed us
to give and receive feedback among ourselves, share ideas, and recognize our own
strengths and weaknesses. During each of the observations we were also accompanied by our
methods professor who was able to share her years of experience and ideas.
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Date: March 5, 2018
1. What I liked:
● The PowerPoint you used was very well structured and helped guide the class.
You didn’t have to rely on a copy of your lesson the whole time which allowed you
to be more involved with the students. (The PowerPoint issues really weren’t that
big of a deal and can easily be fixed for the future).
● You have a large class, but that didn’t keep you from being able to engage your
students and keep them energized about learning Spanish. You really are a
natural teacher and work well with this age group.
● I loved the video you used to practice the alphabet. I had seen the video before,
but I had never thought to cut the sound and have them sing it as a class by
following the image.
2. General Comments/Recommendations:
● Overall I loved your lesson and your involvement with the students, but there were
a few times the back section of the class wasn’t engaged. I would suggest investing
in an iclicker so you can roam the class and interact with the whole class more
fluidly.
● I was very impressed with your students’ eagerness to use the Spanish you taught
them the class before!
● You did a great job working on your feet when unexpected feedback was given at
the moment as well as handling the student falling out of his desk quickly and
efficiently.
● I can tell your students already enjoy your class and you have been able to make an
impact at this school.
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PICTURE FILES
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CARACTERÍSTICAS FÍSICAS
Charlotte es rubia.
Tiana es morena.
Tarzan es castaño.
Jane es castaña.
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Mr. Increíble es alto.
Edna es baja.
Popeye es fuerte.
Olivia es débil.
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Pacha es gordo.
Izma es delgada.
Fiona es bonita.
Shrek es feo.
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Merida es pelirroja.
Gru es calvo.
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DÍAS FESTIVOS
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FINAL THOUGHTS
1. What has been the most beneficial aspect of the Portfolio for you as a Student-Teacher
and why?
The most beneficial aspect of creating my Portfolio has been the new found
confidence I have gained in my lesson planning abilities and my teaching. As a
new and developing teacher I am in the process of discovering what works and
what doesn’t. Creating my portfolio served as a medium to think and reflect,
while at the same time it provided a polished example of my achievement.
Looking back at my portfolio I am able to see a physical example of the hard
work I put into student teaching and recognize I am doing better than I thought.
2. What was the most difficult aspect/section to develop in your Portfolio and why?
Honestly, the hardest part of creating the portfolio was the compilation of it and
not necessarily the content. It is a LOT of information in single document so
finding the right balance of color, charts, organization, details, etc. was time
demanding.
3. Did you use either your Teaching Portfolio/Work Sample or your experience writing it
when you have applied for a teaching position job? Why? What were the results?
Absolutely yes! In addition to my cover letter, resume, and references I carried
my portfolio to every teacher job fair, interview, and event. I spent a lot of time
preparing my portfolio and I wanted to get back what I put into it –and I did.
Every time I pulled out my portfolio interviewers saw it as a representation of
my dedication to my teaching. Once they opened it, they could see tangible
evidence of my teaching methodology and student teaching experience. Many
interviewers were impressed by the detail and justification my portfolio gave
about my teaching style. This served to be extremely helpful because principals
and other interviewers don’t necessarily have a background in linguistics and
second language teaching. They also valued the sneak peek it gave into the
environment and climate of the school I student taught at (InTech) and how I
adapted my teaching to it.
4. What changes or modifications would you suggest us to do in the Teaching
Portfolio/Work Sample? Why? How would future Student-Teachers benefit from those
changes or modifications?
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I would definitely change the expected organization of the the TP/WS because
it wasn’t fluid. In my Portfolio I took the liberty of rearranging my content in a
different order. I would also have liked to see flushed out examples of what my
expectations were instead of just the outline of the portfolio. These changes
would relieve student teachers of some stress and help guide them to a more
finished product.
5. What recommendations would you have for future student teachers in creating their
portfolio/work sample and their student teaching experience in general?
Take advantage of the support system available to you as a student teacher.
Collaborate with fellow student teachers to get new ideas, exchange lessons, and
give feedback. Work with your cooperating teacher and supervisor to not only
perfect your teaching styles and lessons, but also to improve your skills in your
content area. I had the opportunity to collaborate with two native Spanish
speakers during my student teaching. Due to the frequent professional
interactions I had with them, I have noticed an improvement in my language
skills.
Be humble and ready to learn. When you are collaborating with your supervisor
and/or cooperating teacher listen to their advice and be willing to incorporate
their suggestions without taking it personal. This provides a healthy
environment where you can expound upon what you already have and learn
something new.
Get started on your portfolio/work sample early! The sooner you start on your
portfolio/work sample the better you are able to gather student work examples,
contemplate the school environment, and create fully flushed out lesson plans
you can use in the future as an outline reference in the future.
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