The result you're looking for is contained in the following article :
Haberland, Klaus. Perioden von Modulformen einer Variabler and Gruppencohomologie I (German) [Periods of modular forms of one variable and group cohomology I], Math. Nachr. 112 (1983), 245-282.
Let $S_k$ (resp. $M_k$) be the space of holomorphic cusp forms (resp. holomorphic modular forms) for $\Gamma = SL_2(\mathbf{Z})$. Let $\Gamma_{\infty}$ be the stabilizer of $\infty$ in $\Gamma$. Let $V_k$ be the space of polynomials of degree $\leq k-2$ with complex coefficients. Haberland proves an exact sequence
\begin{equation} (*) \qquad 0 \to S_k \oplus \overline{S_k} \to H^1(\Gamma,V_k) \to H^1(\Gamma_\infty,V_k) \to 0. \end{equation} Let $T = [1,1 ; 0, 1] \in \Gamma_{\infty}$. There is a natural map $V_{k+1} \to H^1(\Gamma_\infty,V_k)$ sending a polynomial $P$ to the cocycle $c_P$ determined by $c_P(T) = P(X+1)-P(X)$. It is easy to check that this map induces an isomorphism $\psi : V_{k+1}/V_k \cong H^1(\Gamma_\infty,V_k)$, so that the latter space is one-dimensional.
The "Eisenstein cocycle" you're looking for is a natural map $\delta : M_k \to H^1(\Gamma,V_k)$ which Haberland constructs the following way (actually I learnt this construction and many other properties of $\delta$ during Zagier's 2002-2003 lectures at the Collège de France).
Let $f \in M_k$. Let $\widetilde{f}$ be an Eichler integral of $f$, that is any holomorphic function on $\mathcal{H}$ such that
\begin{equation} \bigl(\frac{1}{2\pi i} \frac{d}{dz}\bigr)^{k-1} \widetilde{f}(z) = f(z). \end{equation} Note that $\widetilde{f}$ is unique up to adding some element of $V_k$. Since we integrate $k-1$ times, the function $\widetilde{f}$ should be thought of as a function of "weight" $k-2\cdot (k-1) = 2-k$ (of course this isn't true in the strict sense). Let us make this more precise.
For any $n \in \mathbf{Z}$, let $|_n$ denote the weight $n$ action of $SL_2(\mathbf{R})$ on the space of complex-valued functions on $\mathcal{H}$ (so that any $f \in M_k$ is a fixed vector of the weight $k$ action of $\Gamma$). Note also the weight $2-k$ action gives the usual action of $\Gamma$ on $V_k$. The crucial fact is that we have
\begin{equation} \widetilde{f} |_{2-k} (\gamma-1) \in V_k \qquad (\gamma \in \Gamma). \end{equation} This can be proved using Bol's identity
\begin{equation} (\frac{d}{dz})^{k-1} (F |_{2-k} g) = (\frac{d^{k-1} F}{dz^{k-1}}) |_k g \end{equation} which holds for any holomorphic function $F$ on $\mathcal{H}$ and any $g \in SL_2(\mathbf{R})$.
Since $\gamma \mapsto \widetilde{f} |_{2-k} (\gamma-1)$ is obviously a coboundary in the space of functions on $\mathcal{H}$, it defines a cocycle in the space $V_k$. Therefore we get $\delta(f) \in H^1(\Gamma,V_k)$ and this element doesn't depend on the choice of $\widetilde{f}$. Thus we have constructed $\delta : M_k \to H^1(\Gamma,V_k)$.
It is not difficult to check that if $f =\sum_{n \geq 0} a_n e^{2i\pi nz}$ then the image of $\delta(f)$ in $H^1(\Gamma_\infty,V_k)$ is the image of the polynomial $\frac{a_0 \cdot (2\pi i)^{k-1}}{(k-1)!} \cdot X^{k-1} \in V_{k+1}$ under the isomorphism $\psi$ above. In particular $\delta$ is injective, and the exact sequence $(*)$ gives the isomorphism you want.
Note that there is a distinguished choice of $\widetilde{f}$, namely
\begin{equation} \widetilde{f} = \sum_{n \geq 1} \frac{a_n}{n^{k-1}} e^{2i\pi nz} + \frac{a_0 \cdot (2\pi i)^{k-1}}{(k-1)!} z^{k-1}. \end{equation} Let $c_f \in Z^1(\Gamma,V_k)$ be the cocycle associated to this choice of $\widetilde{f}$. Let us compute the value of $c_f$ on $T$ and $S=[0,-1;1,0]$. First as explained above, we have
\begin{equation} c_f(T)=\frac{a_0 \cdot (2\pi i)^{k-1}}{(k-1)!} ((X+1)^{k-1}-X^{k-1}). \end{equation} To compute $c_f(S)$, Haberland uses the natural integral representation of $\widetilde{f}$ in terms of $f-a_0$, and gets
\begin{equation} c_f(S) = \frac{(2\pi i)^{k-1}}{(k-2)!} \int_0^{\infty} (f(z)-\frac{a_0}{z^k}-a_0)(z-X)^{k-2} dz \end{equation} (there is a similar but more complicated formula for $c_f(\gamma)$ for any $\gamma \in \Gamma$, see below). Then $c_f(S)$ can be expressed in terms of the special values of $L(f,s) := \sum_{n=1}^\infty a_n/n^s$ at integers $s = 1,\ldots,k-1$. It is then a good exercise to compute $c_f(S)$ when $f$ is the Eisenstein series $E_k$, in terms of Bernoulli numbers and of $\zeta(k-1)$ (this is Satz 3 in Haberland's article, Kapitel 1).
Please tell me if something isn't clear in my explanation.
EDIT : I found the following expression for $c_f(\gamma)$ where $\gamma \in \Gamma$. It is quite complicated (maybe it could be somewhat simplified) :
\begin{equation} \frac{(k-2)!}{(2\pi i)^{k-1}} c_f(\gamma) = \int_{z_0}^{\infty} (f(z)-a_0)(z-X)^{k-2} dz + \int_{\gamma^{-1} \infty}^{z_0} (f(z) -\frac{a_0}{(cz+d)^k}) (z-X)^{k-2} dz + \frac{a_0}{k-1} ((X-z_0)^{k-1}-(X-\gamma z_0)^{k-1}|_{2-k} \gamma + X^{k-1} |_{2-k} (\gamma-1)) \end{equation} where $z_0 \in \mathcal{H}$ is arbitrary and $\gamma= [a,b;c,d]$.