Angela Purtell ’24

ENGLISH ADOLESCENCE EDUCATION (MSEd)

 

The quality education and welcoming environment she experienced as an undergraduate student at SUNY Brockport helped guide Angela Purtell as she started her master’s program in English Adolescence Education.

Angela Purtell Angela Purtell

The quality education and welcoming environment she experienced as an undergraduate student at SUNY Brockport helped guide Angela as she started her master’s program in English Adolescence Education. Throughout her time here, she built relationships and completed significant projects that would help contribute to her career.

“In the spring of 2023, a SUNY Brockport professor and I co-planned and co-taught a literature circle unit for my 9th-grade Honors English class. The overarching theme of the unit was how we can use literary lenses — such as a feminist lens, Marxist lens, and New Historic lens — to analyze literature and better understand the world around us. We then co-presented our work at the 2023 NYSEC conference the following fall,” Angela said.

Angela was able to find a home at SUNY Brockport, and this home presented her with many opportunities. She gained valuable knowledge on what it meant to be an educator and what some of the best practices are when it comes to teaching.

“The best way to learn how to be an educator, as well as best practices in instruction, classroom management, and social-emotional learning, is to start teaching. College can only prepare you so much for the job, but most of what I’ve learned has been from working in the field. You WILL make mistakes, but these are all learning experiences to better your practice in future years. You will read many textbooks that review educational philosophies and practices, but no book can prepare you for the real students in front of you. Use college as a foundation for your practice, but allow your students to help you grow each year,” Angela said.

Angela now works as an eighth-grade ELA teacher at Spencerport Central School. This is her fourth year teaching. In the future, she hopes to participate in more partnerships and share some of her classroom work at conferences.

Learn more about our English Adolescence (MSEd) and other master’s-level education programs.