Reflective Practices in Education: A Primer for Practitioners.

Haleigh Machost, Marilyne Stains
Author Information
  1. Haleigh Machost: Department of Chemistry, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22903.
  2. Marilyne Stains: Department of Chemistry, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia 22903.

Abstract

Reflective practices in education are widely advocated for and have become important components of professional reviews. The advantages of reflective practices are many; however, the literature often focuses on the benefits to students, rather than the benefits for the educators themselves. Additionally, the extant literature concerning reflective practices in education is laden with conflicting terminology and complex studies, which can inhibit educators' understanding of reflective practices and prevent their adoption. As such, this serves as a primer for educators beginning reflective practices. It briefly describes the benefits to educators and different classifications and modalities of reflection and examines some of the challenges that educators may encounter.

References

  1. CBE Life Sci Educ. 2012 Winter;11(4):339-46 [PMID: 23222828]
  2. CBE Life Sci Educ. 2019 Jun;18(2):ar22 [PMID: 31120395]
  3. Science. 2020 Feb 14;367(6479):749-750 [PMID: 32054753]

MeSH Term

Humans
Students
Curriculum
Writing

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0practicesreflectiveeducatorsbenefitsReflectiveeducationliteraturewidelyadvocatedbecomeimportantcomponentsprofessionalreviewsadvantagesmanyhoweveroftenfocusesstudentsratherAdditionallyextantconcerningladenconflictingterminologycomplexstudiescaninhibiteducators'understandingpreventadoptionservesprimerbeginningbrieflydescribesdifferentclassificationsmodalitiesreflectionexamineschallengesmayencounterPracticesEducation:PrimerPractitioners

Similar Articles

Cited By