Search this site
Delicious

Admin
Search PhotoShelter
« Ben Watts | Main | PDP »
Tuesday
13Oct2009

Reflective Practice

Download the PDF’s below and read them for next weeks session

What is ‘Reflective Practice’ ?

Reflective Writing This paper focuses on Health care professionals but the basic principles are the same.

 

Donald Schön (1983) suggested that the capacity to reflect on action so as to engage in a process of continuous learning was one of the defining characteristics of professional practice. He argued that the model of professional training which he termed “Technical Rationality”—of charging students up with knowledge in training schools so that they could discharge when they entered the world of practice, perhaps more aptly termed a “battery” model—has never been a particularly good description of how professionals “think in action”, and is quite inappropriate to practice in a fast-changing world.
The cultivation of the capacity to reflect in action (while doing something) and on action (after you have done it) has become an important feature of professional training programmes in many disciplines, and its encouragement is seen as a particularly important aspect of the role of the mentor of the beginning professional. Indeed, it can be argued that “real” reflective practice needs another person as mentor or professional supervisor, who can ask appropriate questions to ensure that the reflection goes somewhere, and does not get bogged down in self-justification, self-indulgence or self-pity!

The quality and depth of the reflection, however, is not specified within this formulation: and it is interesting that two different traditions of professional development emphasise seemingly contradictory aspects. Reynolds (1965), and particularly Dreyfus and Dreyfus (1986) discuss how developing practitioners come gradually to take for granted aspects of their practice which initially preoccupied them, and move on to be concerned about (reflect upon) wider matters. This taking-for-granted on the one hand, and reflection on the other, offers a view of how reflection-on-action deepens in the course of a career.


ATHERTON J S (2009) Learning and Teaching; Reflection and Reflective Practice [On-line] UK: Available: http://www.learningandteaching.info/learning/reflecti.htm Accessed: 12 October 2009

 

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend