2. Postgraduate Course Feedback
Reflective Practice
“Reflective practice can enable practitioners to
learn from experience about themselves, their
work and the way they relate to home and work,
significant others and wider society and
culture…
It challenges assumptions ideological illusions,
damaging social and cultural biases,
inequalities, and questions personal behaviours
which perhaps silence the choices of others or
otherwise marginalise them” (Bolton, 2010, p.3).
4. Reflective practice in professional life
Ideas for the arts,
culture, society,
subjects like dance,
performance,
musical theatre, fine
arts
Reflection on what
you know Experience of practice
8. Schön – reflecting on practice
Reflection-in-action practice is when
practitioners think about practice while they are
doing it. Reflection-on-action can happen after
the encounter. It is about using tacit knowledge
and treating experience as ‘unique’ versus
solely using technical rationality.
“It is the entire process of reflection-in-action
which is central to the ‘art’ by which some
practitioners deal well with situations of
uncertainty, instability uniqueness, and value
conflict” (Schön, 1983, p. 50).
9. Honey and Mumford – how you
learn – one example
We learn in different ways
– Activist - learning by doing
– Reflectors - learning by observing
– Theorist - learning by thinking through in a logical manner
– Pragmatist - learning through putting ideas into practice
and testing them out
“Honey and Alan Mumford developed their learning styles system as a
variation on the Kolb model…” (Infed, 2013, online).
10. Experiential models for reflection
Kolb and others developed models of experiential learning practice that
include developing learning from doing. Learning from experience is a
variation of this practice.
11. Gibbs and experiential models for
reflection
http://www.ldu.leeds.ac.uk/ldu/sddu_multimedia/kolb/kolb_flash.htm
https://www.kent.ac.uk/learning/PDP-and-employability/pdp/reflective.html
12. What is Reflective Practice?
Boud in ‘Creating a Work-based Curriculum’,
Work-based Learning A New Higher Education
(Boud and Solomon, 2001) p. 55.
“Critical reflection is important… because it
is only through deeper critique that work
situations can be improved, workplaces
transformed and productivity significantly
enhanced. It is about noticing and
questioning the taken-for-granted
assumptions that one holds and that are
held by others. While it can be
discomforting process, it is necessary in all
situations that do not involve perpetuating
the status quo.”
13. Dewey
John Dewey introduced a practical way of
thinking saying that experience was key
to understanding.
“Reflective thinking is always more or less
troublesome because it involves overcoming
the inertia that inclines one to take things at
face value ; it involves willingness to endure a
condition of mental unrest and disturbance
(1910, p.13).
“Unconsciousness gives
spontaneity and
freshness ; consciousness
conviction and control”
(2010, p. 217).
14. The journey
Seeing the realities of practice.
Allowing the process to clarify and articulate needs.
15. Using Reflection
Personal goals
that can be
played out at
work and home
to develop a
work/life
balance and
utilise informal
learning
Where do you
think the process
of reflection might
help you improve
or develop more
useful practice?
Job description
What is your role
What do you do?
16. Twyla Thwarp suggests in The Creative
Habit (2003) reflected using her dance
practice (see Reader 2)
Mihaly Csikszenrmihalyi talks about ‘flow’ and
suggests that emersing yourself in a ‘domain’
that you truly love will allow the “foundations for
creativity” to be in place”. (2006)
https://www.ted.com/talks/mihaly_csikszentmihalyi_on_flow?language=en
Pronounced Chick – sent – me - high
http://www.twylatharp.org
Thinking within the arts – related
to reflection….
http://www.neondance.org/news/2016/2/7/chore
Think about reflecting on your experiences – including all aspects of what you do.
17. Thinking within the arts – related
to reflection….
http://momngaxxx1.blogspot.co.uk/2013/11/how-does-state-of-flow-effect-in.html
18. Add to your portfolio
Add to your portfolio where you can continue to
explore the practices discussed today.
Personal journal
Work log
Concept drawings
Collecting evidence
Digital blog
Work based identity
Participating in online
Forums
19. Tasks for Part 2 in the Handbook
Reader 2
Page 22 in the handbook
20. Working in your journal using
visuals
https://www.mindmeister.com/blog/2013/09/17/the-students-guide-to-mind-mapping/
Mind mapping ideas
can help you see
them more clearly.
This can be in
words and images.
24. Reviewing an incident using Gibbs or Kolb
– this is a lot like the design process
Take an larger significant incident from you own
professional working environment and apply the thinking
form the Kolb cycle.
Discuss this with others.
Doing…
Reviewing…
Concluding…
Planning/trying
out…
What did you do?
How did it go?
What ideas would you keep
or do differently?
When we you try out the
new version after reflecting
on the outcomes?
25. Learning Log exercise
What was the task for the learning?
What have I learned about the
focus/task?
How can I be more effective? What
needs to be done and why? e.g.
acquiring knowledge,
feedback/discussion with peers?
What have I discovered about
myself? e.g. strengths, points of view,
values…
Fill out the sample learning log using a small and focused experience
from your workplace. This could be done in your reflective journal.
Date
26. Using Reflection
What did
you learn
about
yourself?
What did
your learn
about
where you
work/volunt
eer?
Experience of practice
27. Using Reflection
What are your ideas?
Have you put these thought in your
journal or on a blog?
How can you action your ideas?
Following up on the critical reflection - making a difference to practice…
28. Using reflective practice with others
Leading others along the way
Guiding service users in reflective practice.
29. Communities of Practice (Wenger)
Reflection also means thinking about
your experience with other people
“Communities of practice are groups of people who share a concern or a
passion for something they do and learn how to do it better as they interact
regularly” (Wenger, 2011, online).
30. Mapping your CoPs – networking that is
related to reflective practice
Using the 3 elements as guides map and describe and map your
communities of practice and the elements of coherence they might
have.
31. Your network of practice
See if you can map your communities of practice – then we will discuss
how you can use reflective practice in these groupings.
32. Your network of practice
How can your reflective practice to think about activity
within your professional communities of practice?
Can everyone think of 3 ways that reflective practice can be
shared within your various communities? Try to action
these as you develop your community networks.
Work role 1
Professional
communityPersonal
or voluntary Work role 2
33. Adding to or making a start
Use today’s exercises to develop a sense of where
you need to apply critical reflection in your practice.
35. Indicative Bibliography
Bolton, Gillie (2010) (3rd
Ed.) Reflective Practice Writing a& Professional Development,
London: Sage Publications Ltd. YOUR EBOOK FOR MODULE 1
Boud, David and Solomon, Nicky (2001) Work-based Learning A New Higher
Education A New Higher Education, SRHE, Buckingham: Taylor and Francis Inc.
Infed (2013) reflection Infed (2013) (online) reflectionhttp://infed.org/mobi/reflection-
learning-and-education/; ‘david a. kolb on experiential learning’, Available
fromhttp://www.infed.org/biblio/b-explrn.htm; ‘Schon’, Available at:
http://www.infed.org/thinkers/et-schon.htm
International Review of Open and Distance Learning (2011) (illustration of CoP)
(online) Available from: http://www.irrodl.org/index.php/irrodl/article/view/204/286
Gibbs G (1988) Learning by Doing: A guide to teaching and learning methods. Further
Education Unit. Oxford Polytechnic:
Oxford.https://www.brookes.ac.uk/students/upgrade/study-skills/reflective-writing-
gibbs/
Kolb’s Learning Styles (2011) (illustration and text) Available from
http://www.businessballs.com/kolblearningstyles.htm
Murillo, E. (2011) "Communities of practice in the business and organization studies
literature" Information Research, 16(1) paper 464. [Available at