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Reflective Journal

Reflective Journal. Learning Outcomes Explain the purpose of reflection State the benefits of maintaining a reflective journal Give examples of reflective

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Page 1: Reflective Journal. Learning Outcomes Explain the purpose of reflection State the benefits of maintaining a reflective journal Give examples of reflective

Reflective Journal

Page 2: Reflective Journal. Learning Outcomes Explain the purpose of reflection State the benefits of maintaining a reflective journal Give examples of reflective

Learning Outcomes

• Explain the purpose of reflection

• State the benefits of maintaining a reflective journal

• Give examples of reflective models

Page 3: Reflective Journal. Learning Outcomes Explain the purpose of reflection State the benefits of maintaining a reflective journal Give examples of reflective

Reflection

What is reflection?

“Reflection is an important human

activity in which people recapture their

experience, think about it, mull it over

and evaluate it. It is this working with

experience that is important in

learning”.(Boud, Keogh & Walker, (1985),pg 19)

• How can reflection help me in practical class?

• We all reflect to some extent while working, for example, if something goes wrong in marking out or cutting the joint we make a mental note of it and try not to repeat the same mistake the next time.

• This is reflection in it’s simplest form.

Page 4: Reflective Journal. Learning Outcomes Explain the purpose of reflection State the benefits of maintaining a reflective journal Give examples of reflective

Reflective journal

• What is an reflective journal?

• A Journal is keeping a written record of events.

• A reflective journal is also about reading back over past entries and writing about newly acquired knowledge.

• A reflective journal is a very effective tool in developing learning and deepens the learning experience.

• There are many models used for reflection.

Page 5: Reflective Journal. Learning Outcomes Explain the purpose of reflection State the benefits of maintaining a reflective journal Give examples of reflective

Schön• In practical class you are learning

the skills of jointing techniques. Schon’s reflective methods best apply in this situation.

• Schön’s (1983) reflection-in-action (thinking while doing the task) as you need to reflect if the task in hand is going well or if you need to stop and re-evaluate what you are doing.

• In“reflection-in-action”, “doing and thinking are complementary. Doing extends thinking in the tests, moves, and probes of experimental action, and reflection feeds on doing and its results. Each feeds the other, and each sets boundaries for the other” (Schön, 1983, p. 280, as cited in Visser,W.(2010) pg 21)

Page 6: Reflective Journal. Learning Outcomes Explain the purpose of reflection State the benefits of maintaining a reflective journal Give examples of reflective

Schön

• Schön’s reflection-on-action (thinking after-the-event) allows you to evaluate what you have just completed ask what you would have done differently and allows you to make decisions on what you will do the next time around.

• Exercise • Think about your practical class last

week.• Is there anything that you would do

differently next time around. • For Example: • The sequence in which you approached

each task.• The method used to complete each

task.• The pace at which you worked.• The end result.

Page 7: Reflective Journal. Learning Outcomes Explain the purpose of reflection State the benefits of maintaining a reflective journal Give examples of reflective

Schön

• Exercise • In answering those questions what

can you do if anything to improve on last weeks work.

• As you are ‘learning by doing’ you need to reflect on what you are doing as you are doing it and how you could possibly do it differently the next time around.

Page 8: Reflective Journal. Learning Outcomes Explain the purpose of reflection State the benefits of maintaining a reflective journal Give examples of reflective

Schön’s views on professional practice• Schön believes that as students

progress in professional life that they will be more capable of being able to think on their feet and develop their practise as they draw on past experiences. Schön’s argument was as follows:

• Professional practice is complex, unpredictable and messy. In order to cope, professionals have to be able to do more than follow set procedures. They draw on both practical experience and theory as they think on their feet and improvise. They act both intuitively and creatively. Both reflection-in and on -action allows them to revise, modify and refine their expertise. (as cited in Finlay, L. (2008) pg4)

Page 9: Reflective Journal. Learning Outcomes Explain the purpose of reflection State the benefits of maintaining a reflective journal Give examples of reflective

Kolb’s Reflective Cycle

Kolb'sExperiential

learning

1. Experiencing:Immersing yourself in the task

2. Reflection:What did you notice?

3. ConceptualisationWhat does it mean?

4. PlanningWhat will happen next, What do you want to change?

Kolb’s Experiential learning is going a step further than Schön’s. The reflection -in-action was only taking place when things were going wrong, with Kolb’s the reflection takes part on an ongoing bases.

Page 10: Reflective Journal. Learning Outcomes Explain the purpose of reflection State the benefits of maintaining a reflective journal Give examples of reflective

Kolb’s Reflective Cycle

•Using Kolb’s reflective cycle allows you to plan ahead.

•By thinking back on how things progressed the last time around you are now in a position to plan your work better.

•Example:•I cut the tennon too narrow.•Why did this happen?•Was it because I did the

groove first?•Planning •Next time I’ll cut the cheeks of

the tennon first before grooving.

Page 11: Reflective Journal. Learning Outcomes Explain the purpose of reflection State the benefits of maintaining a reflective journal Give examples of reflective

Gibbs (1988) Reflective Cycle

Description – What

happened?

Feelings – What were

you feeling?

Evolution – What was Good/Bad?

Analysis – What sense could you

make of the situation?

Conclusion – What else could you

have done?

Action Plan – What could you do next

time?

Gibbs model is a never ending cycle whereby theory and practice constantly feed from each other

Page 12: Reflective Journal. Learning Outcomes Explain the purpose of reflection State the benefits of maintaining a reflective journal Give examples of reflective

Gibbs (1988) Reflective Cycle

• By starting off using basic reflective models you should progress to a deeper reflective process.

• The more you engage in reflection the deeper your learning experience becomes.

• You begin to use your own system for analysing tasks and can apply your learning to any task given instead of just similar tasks.

Page 13: Reflective Journal. Learning Outcomes Explain the purpose of reflection State the benefits of maintaining a reflective journal Give examples of reflective

Gibbs (1988) Reflective Cycle

• In professional practice tasks do not always follow set procedures.

• You need to draw on both practical experience and theory to think on your feet and improvise.

Page 14: Reflective Journal. Learning Outcomes Explain the purpose of reflection State the benefits of maintaining a reflective journal Give examples of reflective

Blogging

• Online blogging can be used as an outlet were you can express your thoughts and ideas in a fairly quick manner.

• It is a place were you can keep all these ideas and resources together.

• It can be used to hold online discussions with other members of your class or programme.

• It can also allow you access to the wider community, help you make contacts, with people in the industry.

Page 15: Reflective Journal. Learning Outcomes Explain the purpose of reflection State the benefits of maintaining a reflective journal Give examples of reflective

Performance Check

• Outline the purpose of reflection

• List the benefits of maintaining a reflective journal

• Identify three reflective models

Page 16: Reflective Journal. Learning Outcomes Explain the purpose of reflection State the benefits of maintaining a reflective journal Give examples of reflective

References

• Boud, D., Keogh, R. & Walker, D. “Promoting reflection in learning: a model.” In Boud, D., Keogh, R. & Walker, D. (eds.) Reflection: Turning Experience into Learning, New York: Nichols, 18-40, 1985

• Finlay, L.(2008) Reflecting on ‘Reflective practice’. UK http://www.open.ac.uk/cetl-workspace/cetlcontent/documents/4bf2b48887459.pdf

• Moon, J,A. (2006) A Handbook for Reflective Practice and Professional Development. Routledge .USA.

• Schön, D. A. (1983) The Reflective Practitioner: How Professionals Think in Action. New York: Basic Books.

• Visser,W. (2010). SCHÖN: DESIGN AS A REFLECTIVE PRACTICE issue 2 of Collection, on "Art + Design & Psychology," pp. 21-25. http://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/docs/00/60/46/34/PDF/Visser_Collection2_Schoen.pdf

Page 17: Reflective Journal. Learning Outcomes Explain the purpose of reflection State the benefits of maintaining a reflective journal Give examples of reflective

Resources

Resources for online blogging:

• www.blogger.com

• www.penzu.com

• www.posterious.com

• www.tumblr.com