A Short Guide To Reflective Writing: WWW - Intranet.birmingham - Ac.uk/asc
A Short Guide To Reflective Writing: WWW - Intranet.birmingham - Ac.uk/asc
A Short Guide To Reflective Writing: WWW - Intranet.birmingham - Ac.uk/asc
A short guide to
reflective writing
www.intranet.birmingham.ac.uk/asc
2 A short guide to reflective writing
What did I learn? Discussing ideas made me realise there are many
ways of reading a piece of literature. I was
surprised by other people’s interpretations, but
the ones who convinced me were those who linked
their interpretations to specific parts of the text.
Models of reflection
There are frameworks that you can use to aid your reflective process.
Alternatively, you may want to create your own. It needs to be a set
of questions that you can ask yourself about an experience, plus a
process by which you apply and learn from your reflection. Here are
just two examples of models of reflection:
1
Reflection before, during and after
a learning process (Schön, 1983)
Description
What
happened?
Evaluation
Conclusion
What was
What else
good and
could you
bad about the
have done?
experience?
Analysis
What sense
can you
make of the
situation?
6 A short guide to reflective writing
Conclusion
Reflection is a useful process even if you have not been set a specific
reflective assignment. It helps you to make sense of and learn from
your experiences.
Books:
Gibbs, G (1988). Learning by doing: a
guide to teaching and learning methods.
Oxford: Further Education Unit, Oxford
10185 © University of Birmingham 2015. Printed on a recycled grade paper containing 100% post-consumer waste.
Polytechnic.
Online resources:
Open University, Skills for OU Study. Be
aware of your habits. [online]. Available at:
www2.open.ac.uk/students/skillsforstudy/
be-aware-of-your-habits.php
[Accessed 5 July 2012]