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Driving learning through blogging: Students’ perceptions of a reading journal blog assessment task.
Fig.1. My take on blogging – the highly skewed view of someone who has blogged with a passion since 1999
Driving learning through blogging: Students’ perceptions of a reading journal blog assessment task. (2007/2008)
Melanie James
I’m reading academic papers on blogging for a few reasons:
- part of H809 (Practice-based research in educational technology) – getting my head around how research is conducted
- my interest in blogging as more than verbal jamming (my take on it)
- its value or otherwise as a student learning experience
- its value or otherwise in a business context
- this paper as its author came out of ‘industry’ to work in academia – my hoped for career shift.
- whether there’s PhD research in here somewhere.
(I currently think not based on the papers I have read and a PhD thesis on blogging in business – to ill defined, too broad, nothing that original to put online what some people may have put in a diary/journal, gets confused with internal communications, PR and journalism. Is NOT an effective means of knowledge transfer. I’d prefer the expert view – in person. Perhaps where the skill of this loose kind of writing is under scrutiny – stream of consciousness as a writing style).
The uses are specific. The greater value is with those for whom writing forms a part of their career plan.
So journalism, creative writing, PR, communications and social media … advertising too. As a platform to support a foundation course it might be used to develop academic writing skills. Three years ago I pulled out my 1999 copy of ‘Learn how to study’ from the OU.
My notes on this are interesting for two reasons
- noting how the book is laid out like a web page (it is of course the web page than still is a poor copy of the printed word)
- the pertinence of the advice to someone studying a undergraduate and graduate level
- the style of writing, that feels like it comes from the 1950s.
After we’ve read, heard and talked about a topic, our minds are awash with ideas, impressions and chunks of information.
But we never really get to grips with this experience until we try to write down our own version of it. Making notes is of some help, of course. But there is nothing like the writing of an essay to make us question our ideas, weigh up our impressions, sort out what information is relevant and what is not – and, above all, come up with a reasoned viewpoint on the topic that we can feel it our own’. (Rowntree. p. 170 1999)
Problem/Opportunities | Students who fail to engage with the required course readings will be silent and disengaged. This can have a negative impact across all students.Students who don’t engage with the technology, such as blogging, will be at a disadvantage as PR in the future will include the use of Web-based technologies. |
Structure | Questionnaire taken alongside end of module questionnaires taken by each cohort. |
Questions | Does this type of assessment task increase student engagement with required course reading? Does the assessment task have wider application than in public relations courses? Does this facilitate the development of students’ technical skills in using new media? |
Setting | University of Newcastle, Australia First and Second year Public Relations undergraduates. |
Author | Dr. Melanie James, PhD (UoN), Grad.Cert. PTT (UoN), MA Journalism (UTS), BA Communication (Hons) (UTS), MPRIA joined the School of Design, Communication and IT at the University of Newcastle in November 2006 after working in senior management roles in strategic communication, government communication, public relations and marketing communication. |
Research | Research on teaching and assessment. (Rowntree 1971, Boud, 1988) |
Concepts | |
Methods | A formal survey was undertaken in Semester Two to evaluate the students’ perceptions of the reading journal blog assessment task and to identify students’ opinions as to the strengths and weaknesses of the two specific aims of the assessment task. (James 2007 p. 2 )The first aim was measured by asking whether they felt the task contributed to their learning about public relations at an introductory level through engagement with the course readings and the second aim was measured by asking whether they felt the assignment had facilitated their development of technical skills in blogging.
The survey questionnaire included 12 Likert-type items which asked for levels of agreement-disagreement with statements relating to the reading journal blog assessment task. Multichoice type online survey completed anonymously. |
Frameworks | |
Findings | Only a minority of students commented on other students’ blogs even though it was clearly indicated on the grading criteria that it had the potential to earn the student more marks. (James. p. 5 2007)From a lecturer’s perspective, the level of engagement with the assessment task in particular, the coursework projects generally, and the in-class discussion was extremely satisfactory. (James. p. 6. 2007)
The overall standard of the final course group project was high, and although not directly comparable with previous years’ results, average grades for the course were higher. (James. p. 7. 2007) Nearly three-quarters of respondents (71%) agreed that the blogging assessment task tied in well with the class exercises and other assessment tasks (RQ6). (James. p. 11. 2009) |
Paradigms | A constructivist approach to learning – learners construct contextual meaning rather than students predominantly being passive receivers of information (Anderson, Krathwohl, Airasian, Cruikshank, Mayer & Pintrich, 2001).Combining a learning journal with a blog was seen as a way to design an assessment task that responded to both identified challenges and would also foster the active engagement and personal investment factors that Angelo (1995, cited in Connor-Greene, 2000), considers crucial to effective teaching. (James p. 4. 2007) |
Limitations | Academics unclear of the marking criteria. Students not familiar with blogging so needed more setup time. Academic integrity of the content. 61% responded to the survey. |
Implications | Ways to better design the course. Use of sentence leads to start the blog. Use of sentence leads to comment on other people’s blogs. |
PR students will need to be able to set up, maintain and contribute to blogs and make decisions about whether such tactics should be adopted in campaigns (Alexander, 2004; McAllister and Taylor, 2007).
This reads like second guessing the way the world has gone – but successful social media PR agencies do little else but blog for their clients, some do reputation management seeing what the social media are saying.
Reading to learn has long been a feature of higher education (Guthrie, 1982, cited in Maclellan, 1997).
For all the highfalutin e-learning interactive stuff how much do postgraduates, let alone undergraduates, spend reading? If you study law how else do you engage with the content?
Enthusiasm for the new from academics. “blogs have the potential, at least, to be a truly transformational technology in that they provide students with a high level of autonomy while simultaneously providing opportunity for greater interaction with peers” (Williams & Jacobs, 2004, p. 232).
It must be human nature to respond in one of two ways to anything new – love it or hate it. Academic research can turn revolution or pending doom into the mundane.
‘As expected from the experiences of students in the first iteration of the assessment task, RQ4 and RQ5 clearly indicated that the majority of the respondents were inexperienced with both blogging and posting comments to existing blogs’. (James, p. 10. 2009) So much for Prensky, Oblinger et al and the ‘digital natives’ – far from being eager and skilled online, they are nonplussed.
More than two thirds (67%) of respondents indicated they had not had experience with blogging before the course, and 80% disagreed with the statement “posting comments on other people’s blogs was something I’d done regularly prior to doing this course”. James, p. 11. 2009)
So much for Prensky, Oblinger et al and the ‘digital natives’ nonsense – far from being eager and skilled online, they are nonplussed.
REFERENCE
Alexander, D. (2004). Changing the public relations curriculum: A new challenge for educators. PRism 2. Retrieved 24th April, 2007, from http://praxis.massey.ac.nz/fileadmin/Praxis/Files/Journal_Files/Issue2/Alexander.pdf
Anderson, L., Krathwohl, D., Airasian, P., Cruikshank, K., Mayer, R., & Pintrich, P. (2001). A taxonomy for learning, teaching, and assessing: A revision of Bloom’s taxonomy of educational objectives (AbridgedEd.). New York: Longman.
Boud, D. (1988). Developing student autonomy in learning (2nd ed). New York: Kogan Page.
Connor-Greene, P. (2000). Making connections: Evaluating the effectiveness of journal writing in enhancing student learning.Teaching of Psychology, 27, 44-46.
James, M.B. (2008), ‘Driving learning through blogging: Students? perceptions of a reading journal blog assessment task’, Prism, 5 1-12 (2008) [C1] (accessed 27 Feb 2013 http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/38338 )
McAllister, S. & Taylor, M. (2007). Community college web sites as tools for fostering dialogue. Public Relations Review, 33, 230-232.
Maclellan, E. (1997). Reading to learn. Studies in Higher Education, 22, 277-288
Prensky, M (2001) Digital natives and digital immigrants.
Rowntree, D (1999) How to learn to study.
Williams, J. & Jacobs, J. (2004) Exploring the use of blogs as learning spaces in the higher education sector. Australasian Journal of Educational Technology 20(2), 232-247.
Related articles
- Findings and Analysis (dsptechnologies.wordpress.com)
- To be told when you are right or wrong is essential to student learning (mymindbursts.com)
- The assessment of learning journals – ideas for BIM (davidtjones.wordpress.com)
- How To Integrate Blogging Into Math Classes (edudemic.com)
Reflection in Higher Education (Notes on reading)
Reflection in Higher Education. Jenny Moon
The nature of reflection – how it is seen in theory and how theoretical views are related to the common sense view of reflection.
In other words, it suggests that reflection is a simple process but with complex outcomes that relate to many different areas of human functioning. (p4)
Personal development planning (PDP) can involve different forms of reflection and reflective learning.
We are using it extensively in a range of contexts in learning and professional development in higher education.
There is no point in defining reflection in a manner that does not relate to the everyday use of the word if further confusion is not to be created.
·We reflect on something in order to consider it in more detail.
·Usually we reflect because we have a purpose for reflecting – a goal to reach. Goal orientated. Having a purpose and focus.
·Sometimes we find ourselves ‘being reflective’ and out of that ‘being reflective’, something ‘pops up’. I am in the ‘pop-up’ camp.
·Seeking understanding and clarity where we had none. We reflect on things that are relatively complicated. Where there is not an obvious or immediate solution.
·Emotion. Some theorists see the role of emotion in reflection as very significant and frequently neglected (eg. Boud, Keogh and Walker, 1985).
·a means of working on what we know already
·We put into the reflection process knowledge that we already have (thoughts, ideas, feelings etc), we may add new information and then we draw out of it something that accords with the purpose for which we reflected.
Reflection is a form of mental processing – like a form of thinking – that we use to fulfil a purpose or to achieve some anticipated outcome. (based on Moon 1999):
Reflection is theorised in so many different ways that it might seem that we a looking at range of human capacities rather than apparently one.
·Dewey saw reflection as a specialised form of thinking. ‘a kind of thinking that consists in turning a subject over in the mind and giving it serious thought’. (Such churning, such composting, requires plenty of matter, words, and time)
·‘Active, persistent and careful consideration of any belief or supposed form of knowledge in the light of the grounds that support it, and further conclusions to which it leads…it includes a conscious and voluntary effort to establish belief upon a firm basis of evidence and rationality’ (Dewey, 1933).
Jurgen Habermas (1971) focused on the way in which humans process ideas and construct them into knowledge.
– instrumental knowledge – where we know ‘how’ or ‘that’ and where the concern of the knowledge is to understand and thereby function within, and control our human environment.
– knowledge that is concerned with the interpretation of human action and behaviour. We largely ‘interpret’ in the social sciences in order to better our understanding of society and human behaviour.
– knowledge that is a way of working with knowledge, acting on the first two forms of knowledge. This form of knowledge is developed through critical or evaluative modes of thinking and leads towards the emancipation or transformation of personal, social or other situations. It concerns the quality of the bases on which we make judgements.
David Kolb (1984) is well known for his development of the Kolb cycle – or cycle of experiential learning.
Concrete experiencing
(have an experience)
Active experimentation Reflective observation
(try out what you have learned) (reflect on the experience)
Abstract conceptualising
(learn from the experience)
i.e. learning from experience
Like CBT.
The cycle revolves with new learning undergoing active experimentation and ‘recycled’ through new experiencing. In this way what was a cycle becomes a spiral (Cowan 1998).
A kind of cognitive ‘housekeeping role’ as well as generating new learning (Moon, 1999a).
Donald Schon focused on reflection in professional knowledge and its development (1983, 1987). They build up an expertise from their practice (theory-in-use) by being reflective.
Making this ‘knowing-in-action’ explicit so that it can be the subject of further reflection and conscious development.
Many others have written about reflection, most developing ideas from those mentioned above.
Examples are:
Boud, Keogh and Walker, 1985;
Boud and Walker, 1998;
Cowan, 1998,
Brockbank and McGill, 1998.
A ‘deep’ approach and a ‘surface’ approach to a learning task.
A deep approach is where the intention of the learner is to understand the meaning of the material.
A surface approach to learning is where a learner is concerned to memorise the material for what it is, not trying to understand it in relation to previous ideas or other areas of understanding.
These approaches to learning are not ‘either or’ situations, but at extremes of a continuum and the same learner may choose to learn differently according to the task at hand.
E.G Dexion, What is the problem? What is the problem? What is the problem? What is the problem? What is the problem? Repeatedly until you get to thr crux of the problem. ‘Tha swallowed the fly, that ate the dog, that …. etc
Making sense – getting to know the material as coherent – but only in relation to itself. Facts may be fitted together like a jigsaw but not related to previous understandings. Representation is coherent reproduction, but not related to other ideas and not processed.
Making meaning.
Working with meaning
Transformative learning
On the basis of this model, There are at least three ways in which reflection might be seen as relating to learning.
1.Reflection has a role in the deeper approaches to learning – the last three stages described above, but not in surface approaches to learning (the first two stages);
2.We learn from representing learning – when we write an essay or explain something or draw a picture of it, we represent it to ourselves and learn from the re-processing (Eisner, 1991). This is a reflective process;
3.We ‘upgrade’ learning. For example, we can go back to ideas learnt only to the stage of ‘making sense’ (eg in the form of facts – bits and pieces) and can reprocess those ideas through reflection, integrating them with current understandings (Vygotsky, 1978). This might be conceived as a kind of ‘chewing the cud’ exercise – or cognitive housekeeping (see earlier).
A well functioning tutorial system is an example of a means by which we encourage students to upgrade their learning (3). Preparation for and involvement in a tutorial is the opportunity for many students to reflect on and process their learning into a more meaningful state – in other words, to ‘re-file’ it.
Revision for examinations is another opportunity for review of previous learning such that understanding is deepened (Entwistle and Entwistle, 1992).
Reflection slows down activity, giving the time for the learner to process material of learning and link it with previous ideas.
Reflection enables learners to develop greater ‘ownership’ of the material of learning (Rogers, 1969). It will also enhance the student’s ‘voice’ in her learning (Elbow, 1981).
A particularly important means by which reflective activity generally supports learning is through the encouragement of metacognition. (Ertmer and Newby, 1996). Study skills programmes that support learner’s awareness of their learning processes seem to be more successful than those that focus on techniques (Main, 1985).
We suggested above that reflection occurs when we are dealing with material that is relatively complicated – or ill-structured. (King and Kitchener, 1994).
METHODS pp8
On the assumption that reflection has a valuable role to play in higher education, the methods below serve as vehicles for reflection within the curriculum.
Just asking students to write a learning journal, for example, may bring benefits, but they will be haphazard.
learning journals, logs, diaries … with the intention of improving or supporting learning but are of many different forms. used successfully in most disciplines including the sciences and mathematics (Moon, 1999a).
Portfolios … unreflective compilation of work, to collections of coursework and reading with reflective comments, to coursework with an attached overview, to something very akin to a learning journal.
reflection on work experience … to develop employment skills, or to use the experience as a basis for learning about self and personal functioning (eg Colling and Watton, 2000, Watton and Moon, 2002 – in preparation)
reflection in work-based learning. (Boud and Garrick, 1999).
reflective exercises: Examples are contained in Angelo and Cross, 1990; George and Cowan, 1999; Moon, 1999 and 1999a).
in peer and self assessment: self or peer assessment they are likely to be reflecting on the work in relation to their perception of how they think it should appear
in careers or personal development.
in APEL (accreditation of prior experiential learning
It has had a particularly strong role in professional education and development – with nursing, teacher education and social work as the principle examples.
An impetus to the thinking that underlies this section is the frequent observation that not all students find reflection easy when it is introduced as a specific requirement
Some, however, who may be good students otherwise, will not understand what is meant by it – and will ask ‘what is it that you want me to do?’
The discourses of some subjects are, by nature, more likely to require reflective activity ‘on paper’.
Academic reflection will be more structured.
We may be giving structures – such as the Kolb cycle – to follow.
In our private reflections, we do not systematically describe what we are about to reflect on – we just do it
From Moon (1999a)
Academic reflection is, therefore, more structured and more formal than what we will term ‘informal’ reflection.
Reflection can be superficial and little more than descriptive or can be deep and transformative (and involved in the transformative stage of learning).
Reflection is used to make sense of unstructured situations in order to generate new knowledge. It is important to be clear that the activity might be introducing the skill of reflective learning or generating knowledge by using reflection to make sense of something.
Most students will have learnt that they should not use the first person singular in an academic environment. (Which is where I feel my ‘voice’ is being compromised by obliging me to speak in a certain way.)
Most students will have learnt that they should not use the first person singular in an academic environment.
Descriptive writing: This is a description of events or literature reports. There is no discussion beyond description. This writing is considered not to show evidence of reflection. It is important to acknowledge that some parts of a reflective account will need to describe the context – but in this case, writing does not go beyond description.
Descriptive reflection: There is basically a description of events, but the account shows some evidence of deeper consideration in relatively descriptive language. There is no real evidence of the notion of alternative viewpoints in use.
Dialogic reflection: This writing suggests that there is a ‘stepping back’ from the events and actions which leads to a different level of discourse. There is a sense of ‘mulling about’, discourse with self and an exploration of the role of self in events and actions. There is consideration of the qualities of judgements and of possible alternatives for explaining and hypothesising. The reflection is analytical or integrative, linking factors and perspectives.
Critical reflection: This form of reflection, in addition to dialogic reflection, shows evidence that the learner is aware that the same actions and events may be seen in different contexts with different explanations associated with the contexts. They are influenced by ‘multiple historical and socio-political contexts’, for example.
(developed from Hatton and Smith, 1995)
. A fair question is that since reflection is an encouragement for learners to follow the lines of their own thinking, to work without a curriculum – how can it be marked?
i.e. as the institution hasn’t put in place adequate systems to monitor my progress why don’t I do it myself and give myself marks out of ten too?
The message of this section is essentially that there is no one way to assess reflective work. There are no clearly agreed generic criteria for reflection since different people see reflection as different processes (as has been demonstrated in the early sections) and they set reflective tasks in order to achieve different purposes.
To encourage a student to be reflective is to encourage the development of a habit of processing cognitive material that can lead the student to ideas that are beyond the curriculum, beyond learning defined by learning outcomes, and beyond those of the teacher who is managing the learning.
Boud, D and Walker, D (1998) |
‘Promoting reflection in professional courses: the challenge of context’, Studies in Higher Education, 23(2), pp191 – 206 |
Reflection on Learning
Guide for busy academics. No.4 Notes. Learning through reflection.
Jenny Moon, University of Exeter – the guide. Upright.
Jonathan Vernon, my thoughts – my reflection(s), in italics and (parenthesies) as if I don’t quite mean it. Or do I? These thoughts just pop into my head. They bubble up from nowhere. (Reflection or an unfortunate chemical condition called myelination.)
PDP can involve many forms of reflection and reflective learning.
A mysterious activity … or capacity? (or indulgence)
‘it lies somewhere around the notion of learning.’ (What on earth is meant by that?)
(Plenty of people reflect, it is apparent in those people who listen during meetings. When they have something to say it is because they have taken on board various ideas and are then able to summarise and offer their own thoughts. They don’t need to write it down, all they have to do is sit forward and concentrate on what is being said, rather than thinking about what they would like to say.)
Generally reflection is a means of working on what we know already and it generates new knowledge.
(I disagree. Why reflect on something you know already? Surely not giving it a second thought applies when you understand something, better when you can act intuitively. On the contrary, the time to reflect is when you don’t understand, or your thinking has been changed and you need think twice?)
Reflection is a form of mental processing that we use to fulfil a purpose or to achieve some anticipated outcome.
(I disagree. Reflection can be a form of indulgence, a pastime, an entertainment. Indeed, does this author not start out by calling it a ‘mysterious activity … or capacity?’ Nothing they have thus said convinces me that they know otherwise.)
It is applied to gain a better understanding of relatively complicated or unstructured ideas and is largely based on the reprocessing of knowledge, understanding and possibly emotions that we already possess.
(Two words worry me here, ‘relatively’ and ‘largely’ suggest to me someone who doesn’t know, who is hedging their bets and has no evidence to support what they are saying.)
Reflection has a role in:
• academic and non-academic learning
• self development
• critical review
• considering our own processes of mental functioning
• decision-making
• emancipation and empowerment and so on.
(And here it is tag on, cover-all, phrase ‘and so on’ that worries me. A list. An open list. Why not just say ‘reflection has a role in everything.’)
Perhaps it should be called ‘reflectivism’ this obsession with navel gazing.
(It will work for some, not for others. And just because someone reflects a great deal, does not mean they find any deeper truth as a result, or as a result are then capable of deciding a way out of this intellectual impasse and turn thoughts into actions.)
There is a close relationship between reflection and emotion or feelings and many would suggest that the use of reflection in academic contexts provides an appropriate channel for exploration or expression of this human function.
(This is just poor English or Jenny has been listening to too much of ‘Just a minute … trying somewhat awkwardly to avoid using the same word twice.)
Self-awareness and control of emotions is an important factor in academic performance and PDP provides opportunities for emotional engagement with subject learning.
(Perhaps I’ll buy into this based on what I have read on ‘How to study’ in Richard Northridge’s OU book of 1990)
What’s more effective than reflection? Debate.
(And if open, formal debate in the style of a debating society is not feasible, then at least engaged discussion in a tutorial-like setting is required. This makes information stick, this transforms they way you think, changes behaviour and builds knowledge. Reflection doesn’t have teeth, it lacks the emotional edge of tussle with colleagues, fellow students, subject matter experts and senior tutors.)
Reflection compared to debate, is the difference between tea and scones and a bun-fight. Which are you going to remember?
Reflection is tame, learning should be a wild tiger.
• being reflective slows down learning, because it requires time for a learner to reprocess ideas.
(It can cause learning to grind to a halt. If all you are doing is traveling across the same ground. Reflection as a dog chasing its tail, not even that, reflection as a dog chewing its own tail.)
• material on which we reflect is relatively complicated or unstructured material. It challenges learners and when they are challenged, they gain greater abilities in dealing with difficult material of learning.
(We agree on this. But I don’t believe that reflection engenders challenge. Nor do I think, should students share their ‘reflection’ that this should be challenged unless the tutor or moderator wishes to or is trained to act as a kind of therapist who helps the reflective process along, by turning old thoughts into new ones, then seeking and agreeing a way forward.)
I don’t feel challenged by this ‘guide,’ only irritated. Irritation does not foster reflection or debate.
There are many vehicles for reflective learning in the curriculum:
• learning journals, logs etc
• the use of portfolios
• reflection on work experiences
• reflection on placement experiences beyond the deliberate curriculum
• in the context of peer and self assessment
• in the context of careers work, counseling or student or personal development work.
(How about reflection without ever writing it down, or recording it? Just person to person, not talking to yourself in a mirror, or talking to yourself at all, but by speaking with a friend, or colleague, or mentor, or ‘significant other.’)
There are some things to think about when asking students to reflect.
(i.e. before you reflect, reflect and before you get students to reflect, reflect. Indeed, why not stop and think again, think twice, think trice.)
‘You think too much.’
If labels stick, this one stuck. Time to move on, or not. Perhaps I’ll reflect on it.
Perhaps I just did?
REFERENCE
Northridge, Andrew (1990) The Good Study Guide. Open University.
The Higher Education Academy
Guide for Busy Academics No.4
Learning through reflection
28/11/05
Resources for Reflection
(18 September – 1 October)
Unit 2 (part 2): Reflection and learning
Core texts
Centre for Excellence in Teaching and Learning (2009) ‘Completed RLOs – study skills’ (online), Centre for Excellence in Teaching and Learning. Available from: http://www.rlo-cetl.ac.uk/whatwedo/rlos/completedrlos.php#studyskills (JV accessed 28 SEPT 2010).
Crème, P. (2005) ‘Should student learning journals be assessed?’, Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education, vol. 30, no. 3, pp. 287–96. Available from: http://libezproxy.open.ac.uk/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02602930500063850 (JV accessed 25 SEPT 2010).
Moon, J. (2001) ‘PDP working paper 4: reflection in higher education learning’ (online), The Higher Education Academy. Available from: http://www.heacademy.ac.uk/assets/York/documents/resources/resourcedatabase/id72_Reflection_in_Higher_Education_Learning.rtf (JV accessed 26 SEPT 2010).
Moon, J. (2005) ‘Guide for busy academics no. 4: learning through reflection’ (online), The Higher Education Academy. Available from: http://www.heacademy.ac.uk/assets/York/documents/resources/resourcedatabase/id69_guide_for_busy_academics_no4.doc (JV accessed 27 SEPT 2010).
Smith, C. and Haynes, R. (2005) ‘Reflective writing RLO’, London Metroplitan University. Available from: http://intralibrary.rlo-cetl.ac.uk:8080/intralibrary/open_virtual_file_path/i1026n24186t/reflective_writing/reflective_writing.html (JV accessed 28 SEPT 2010).
Smith, M. (1996) ‘Reflection: what constitutes reflection – and what significance does it have for educators? The contributions of Dewey, Schön, and Boud et al. assessed’ (online), The Encyclopaedia of Informal Education. Available from: http://www.infed.org/biblio/b-reflect.htm (JV accessed 26 SEPT 2010).
Supplementary resources
Chen, H.L., Cannon, D., Gabrio, J., Leifer, L., Toye, G. and Bailey, T. (2005) ‘Using wikis and weblogs to support reflective learning in an introductory engineering design course’ [online], paper presented at the 2005 American Society for Engineering Education Annual Conference and Exposition, Research & Innovation in Engineering Education. Available from: http://riee.stevens.edu/fileadmin/riee/pdf/ASEE2005_Paper_Wikis_and_Weblogs.pdf (accessed 25 May 2010).
ERIC Digests, http://www.ericdigests.org/ (accessed 25 May 2010). Enter a keyword search for ‘reflection’.
Lister, S. (n.d.) Do it Yourself Reflection, http://www.educause.edu/blog/slister/DoityourselfReflection/165694 (accessed 25 May 2010).
Making Practice-Based Learning Work (n.d.), Reflection, http://www.practicebasedlearning.org/resources/reflection/intro.htm (accessed 25 May 2010).
Reiss, D. (n.d.) Donna Reiss’ Active Learning Online Resources, http://wordsworth2.net/webfolio/ (accessed 23 June 2009). See also a sample reflective hypertext essay at http://wordsworth2.net/webfolio/refhypertext.htm(accessed 25 May 2010).
Richards, C. (2005) ‘Activity-reflection e-portfolios: an approach to the problem of effectively integrating ICTs in teaching and learning’ (online), Teaching and Learning Forum, Curtin University of Technology. Available from: http://lsn.curtin.edu.au/tlf/tlf2005/refereed/richards.html (accessed 25 May 2010).
Sierra, K. (n.d.) Karina’s Writing Portfolio Wiki, http://cooper.pbwiki.com/Karina (accessed 25 May 2010).
Smith, M.K. (1996/2007) ‘David A. Kolb on experiential learning’ (online), The Encyclopaedia of Informal Education. Available from: http://www.infed.org/biblio/b-explrn.htm (accessed 30 SEPT 2010).
Trafford, P. (2005) ‘Mobile blogs, personal reflections and learning environments’ (online), Ariadne no. 44 (July). Available from: http://www.ariadne.ac.uk/issue44/trafford/intro.html (accessed 25 May 2010).
University of Denver (n.d.) DU Portfolio Community, https://portfolio.du.edu/pc/index (accessed 25 May 2010). Enter ‘reflection’ in the keyword search box for examples of student reflection.
University of Warwick (2004) Recording, Summarizing & Reflecting, http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/elearning/tools/blogbuilder/recordreflect/ (accessed 25 May 2010).
Reflection in Higher Education
In time I will get this down to less than 200 words – or none. Because it won’t be in a blog, or an e-portfolio, but in my head.
And to prove it I should sit an exam or have a viva.
What else can indicate that I have command over the information, that my learning is deep, and that I can deploy what I have learnt?
Everything else is a compromise, a good compromise, but a compromise non the less.
Reflection in Higher Education. Jenny Moon
The nature of reflection – how it is seen in theory and how theoretical views are related to the common sense view of reflection.
Reflection is a simple process but with complex outcomes that relate to many different areas of human functioning. (p4)
Personal development planning (PDP) can involve different forms of reflection and reflective learning.
It is used in a range of contexts in learning and professional development in higher education.
There is no point in defining reflection in a manner that does not relate to the everyday use of the word if further confusion is not to be created.
We reflect:
- in order to consider it in more detail.
- because we have a purpose for reflecting – a goal to reach.
- to seek understanding and clarification
- Where there is not an obvious or immediate solution.
- as a means of working on what we know already
- on knowledge that we already have (thoughts, ideas, feelings etc).
- adding new information and ”drawing out of it something that accords with the purpose for which we reflected.’
- to fulfil a purpose or to achieve some anticipated outcome. (based on Moon 1999):
Some theorists see the role of emotion in reflection as very significant and frequently neglected(eg. Boud, Keogh and Walker, 1985).
Reflection is theorised in so many different ways that it might seem that we a looking at range of human capacities rather than apparently one.
Dewey saw reflection as a specialised form of thinking.
‘a kind of thinking that consists in turning a subject over in the mind and giving it serious thought’.
(Such churning, such composting, requires plenty of matter, words, and time)
‘Active, persistent and careful consideration of any belief or supposed form of knowledge in the light of the grounds that support it, and further conclusions to which it leads…it includes a conscious and voluntary effort to establish belief upon a firm basis of evidence and rationality’ (Dewey, 1933).
Jurgen Habermas (1971) focused on the way in which humans process ideas and construct them into knowledge.
We largely ‘interpret’ in the social sciences in order to better our understanding of society and human behaviour.
Knowledge developed through critical or evaluative modes of thinking.
David Kolb(1984) is well known for his development of the Kolb cycle – or cycle of experiential learning.
i.e. learning from experience
Like CBT.
The cycle revolves with new learning undergoing active experimentation and ‘recycled’ through new experiencing. In this way what was a cycle becomes a spiral (Cowan 1998).
A kind of cognitive ‘housekeeping role’ as well as generating new learning (Moon, 1999a).
Donald Schon focused on reflection in professional knowledge and its development (1983, 1987).
Many have written about reflection:
- Boud, Keogh and Walker, 1985;
- Boud and Walker, 1998;
- Cowan, 1998,
- Brockbank and McGill, 1998.
A ‘deep’ approach and a ‘surface’ approach to a learning task.
A deep approach is where the intention of the learner is to understand the meaning of the material.
A surface approach to learning is where a learner is concerned to memorise the material for what it is, not trying to understand it in relation to previous ideas or other areas of understanding.
These approaches to learning are not ‘either or’ situations, but at extremes of a continuum and the same learner may choose to learn differently according to the task at hand.
E.G Dexion
Invent or solve problems by asking over and over again, ‘What is the problem? What is the problem? What is the problem? What is the problem? What is the problem?’ Until you get to the crux of the problem.
(I got this from attending a business talk/workshop put on in the front sitting room of someone’s house in West Hampstead. This has to be late 1985 or early 1986. If I’ve transcribed those diaries and uploaded them then I ought to be able to do a search and find my notes. Is this how keeping a learning journal for life might aid memory?)
- Making sense
- Making meaning
- Working with meaning
- Transformative learning
On the basis of this model, There are at least three ways in which reflection might be seen as relating to learning
1. In the deeper approaches to learning
2.We learn from representing learning – when we write an essay or explain something or draw a picture of it, we represent it to ourselves and learn from the re-processing (Eisner, 1991).
3.We ‘upgrade’ learning … reprocessing ideas through reflection, integrating them with current understandings (Vygotsky, 1978).
This might be conceived as a kind of ‘chewing the cud’ exercise – or cognitive housekeeping (see earlier).
- A well functioning tutorial system is an example of a means by which we encourage students to upgrade their learning (3).
- Preparation for and involvement in a tutorial is the opportunity for many students to reflect on and process their learning into a more meaningful state – in other words, to ‘re-file’ it.
- Revision for examinations is another opportunity for review of previous learning such that understanding is deepened (Entwistle and Entwistle, 1992).
Reflection slows down activity, giving the time for the learner to process material of learning and link it with previous ideas.
Reflection enables learners to develop greater ‘ownership’ of the material of learning (Rogers, 1969).
Reflection will enhance the student’s ‘voice’ in her learning (Elbow, 1981).
A particularly important means by which reflective activity generally supports learning is through the encouragement of metacognition. (Ertmer and Newby, 1996).
Study skills programmes that support learners’ awareness of their learning processes seem to be more successful than those that focus on techniques (Main, 1985).
We suggested above that reflection occurs when we are dealing with material that is relatively complicated – or ill-structured. (King and Kitchener, 1994).
Just asking students to write a learning journal, for example, may bring benefits, but they will be haphazard.
learning journals, logs, diaries … with the intention of improving or supporting learning but are of many different forms. Used successfully in most disciplines including the sciences and mathematics (Moon, 1999a).
Portfolios … unreflective compilation of work, to collections of coursework and reading with reflective comments, to coursework with an attached overview, to something very akin to a learning journal.
- Reflection on work experience … to develop employment skills, or to use the experience as a basis for learning about self and personal functioning (eg Colling and Watton, 2000, Watton and Moon, 2002 – in preparation)
-
Reflection in work-based learning. (Boud and Garrick, 1999).
-
Reflective exercises: Examples are contained in Angelo and Cross, 1990; George and Cowan, 1999; Moon, 1999 and 1999a).
-
Reflection in peer and self assessment: self or peer assessment they are likely to be reflecting on the work in relation to their perception of how they think it should appear
-
Reflection in careers or personal development.
-
Reflection in APEL (accreditation of prior experiential learning
It has had a particularly strong role in professional education and development – with nursing, teacher education and social work as the principle examples.
An impetus to the thinking that underlies this section is the frequent observation that not all students find reflection easy when it is introduced as a specific requirement
Some, however, who may be good students otherwise, will not understand what is meant by it – and will ask ‘what is it that you want me to do?’
The discourses of some subjects are, by nature, more likely to require reflective activity ‘on paper’.
Academic reflection will be more structured.
We may be giving structures – such as the Kolb cycle – to follow.
In our private reflections, we do not systematically describe what we are about to reflect on – we just do it
From Moon (1999a)
Academic reflection is, therefore, more structured and more formal than what we will term ‘informal’ reflection.
Descriptive or deep
Reflection can be superficial and little more than descriptive or can be deep and transformative (and involved in the transformative stage of learning).
Reflection is used to make sense of unstructured situations in order to generate new knowledge. It is important to be clear that the activity might be introducing the skill of reflective learning or generating knowledge by using reflection to make sense of something.
Most students will have learnt that they should not use the first person singular in an academic environment.
(Which is where I feel my ‘voice’ is being compromised by obliging me to speak in a certain way.)
Most students will have learnt that they should not use the first person singular in an academic environment.
Descriptive writing:
This is a description of events or literature reports. There is no discussion beyond description. This writing is considered not to show evidence of reflection. It is important to acknowledge that some parts of a reflective account will need to describe the context – but in this case, writing does not go beyond description.
Descriptive reflection:
There is basically a description of events, but the account shows some evidence of deeper consideration in relatively descriptive language. There is no real evidence of the notion of alternative viewpoints in use.
Dialogic reflection:
This writing suggests that there is a ‘stepping back’ from the events and actions which leads to a different level of discourse. There is a sense of ‘mulling about’, discourse with self and an exploration of the role of self in events and actions. There is consideration of the qualities of judgements and of possible alternatives for explaining and hypothesising. The reflection is analytical or integrative, linking factors and perspectives.
Critical reflection:
This form of reflection, in addition to dialogic reflection, shows evidence that the learner is aware that the same actions and events may be seen in different contexts with different explanations associated with the contexts. They are influenced by ‘multiple historical and socio-political contexts’, for example.
(developed from Hatton and Smith, 1995)
A fair question is that since reflection is an encouragement for learners to follow the lines of their own thinking, to work without a curriculum – how can it be marked?
i.e. as the institution hasn’t put in place adequate systems to monitor my progress why don’t I do it myself and give myself marks out of ten too?
N.B. The message of this section is essentially that there is no one way to assess reflective work.
N.B. There are no clearly agreed generic criteria for reflection since different people see reflection as different processes (as has been demonstrated in the early sections) and they set reflective tasks in order to achieve different purposes.
To encourage a student to be reflective is to encourage the development of a habit of processing cognitive material that can lead the student to ideas that are beyond the curriculum, beyond learning defined by learning outcomes, and beyond those of the teacher who is managing the learning. Boud, D and Walker (1998)
‘Promoting reflection in professional courses: the challenge of context’, Studies in Higher Education, 23(2), pp191 – 206
Reflection in Higher Education. Jenny Moon.
In time I will get this down to less than 200 words – or none. Because it won’t be in a blog, or an e-portfolio, but in my head.
And to prove it I should sit an exam or have a viva.
What else can indicate that I have command over the information, that my learning is deep, and that I can deploy what I have learnt?
Everything else is a compromise, a good compromise, but a compromise non the less.
Reflection in Higher Education. Jenny Moon
The nature of reflection – how it is seen in theory and how theoretical views are related to the common sense view of reflection.
Reflection is a simple process but with complex outcomes that relate to many different areas of human functioning. (p4)
Personal development planning (PDP) can involve different forms of reflection and reflective learning.
It is used in a range of contexts in learning and professional development in higher education.
There is no point in defining reflection in a manner that does not relate to the everyday use of the word if further confusion is not to be created.
We reflect:
- in order to consider it in more detail.
- because we have a purpose for reflecting – a goal to reach.
- to seek understanding and clarification
- Where there is not an obvious or immediate solution.
- as a means of working on what we know already
- on knowledge that we already have (thoughts, ideas, feelings etc).
- adding new information and ”drawing out of it something that accords with the purpose for which we reflected.’
- to fulfil a purpose or to achieve some anticipated outcome. (based on Moon 1999):
Some theorists see the role of emotion in reflection as very significant and frequently neglected(eg. Boud, Keogh and Walker, 1985).
Reflection is theorised in so many different ways that it might seem that we a looking at range of human capacities rather than apparently one.
Dewey saw reflection as a specialised form of thinking.
‘a kind of thinking that consists in turning a subject over in the mind and giving it serious thought’.
(Such churning, such composting, requires plenty of matter, words, and time)
‘Active, persistent and careful consideration of any belief or supposed form of knowledge in the light of the grounds that support it, and further conclusions to which it leads…it includes a conscious and voluntary effort to establish belief upon a firm basis of evidence and rationality’ (Dewey, 1933).
Jurgen Habermas (1971) focused on the way in which humans process ideas and construct them into knowledge.
We largely ‘interpret’ in the social sciences in order to better our understanding of society and human behaviour.
Knowledge developed through critical or evaluative modes of thinking.
David Kolb(1984) is well known for his development of the Kolb cycle – or cycle of experiential learning.
i.e. learning from experience
Like CBT.
The cycle revolves with new learning undergoing active experimentation and ‘recycled’ through new experiencing. In this way what was a cycle becomes a spiral (Cowan 1998).
A kind of cognitive ‘housekeeping role’ as well as generating new learning (Moon, 1999a).
Donald Schon focused on reflection in professional knowledge and its development (1983, 1987).
Many have written about reflection:
- Boud, Keogh and Walker, 1985;
- Boud and Walker, 1998;
- Cowan, 1998,
- Brockbank and McGill, 1998.
A ‘deep’ approach and a ‘surface’ approach to a learning task.
A deep approach is where the intention of the learner is to understand the meaning of the material.
A surface approach to learning is where a learner is concerned to memorise the material for what it is, not trying to understand it in relation to previous ideas or other areas of understanding.
These approaches to learning are not ‘either or’ situations, but at extremes of a continuum and the same learner may choose to learn differently according to the task at hand.
E.G Dexion
Invent or solve problems by asking over and over again, ‘What is the problem? What is the problem? What is the problem? What is the problem? What is the problem?’ Until you get to the crux of the problem.
(I got this from attending a business talk/workshop put on in the front sitting room of someone’s house in West Hampstead. This has to be late 1985 or early 1986. If I’ve transcribed those diaries and uploaded them then I ought to be able to do a search and find my notes. Is this how keeping a learning journal for life might aid memory?)
- Making sense
- Making meaning
- Working with meaning
- Transformative learning
On the basis of this model, There are at least three ways in which reflection might be seen as relating to learning
1. In the deeper approaches to learning
2.We learn from representing learning – when we write an essay or explain something or draw a picture of it, we represent it to ourselves and learn from the re-processing (Eisner, 1991).
3.We ‘upgrade’ learning … reprocessing ideas through reflection, integrating them with current understandings (Vygotsky, 1978).
This might be conceived as a kind of ‘chewing the cud’ exercise – or cognitive housekeeping (see earlier).
- A well functioning tutorial system is an example of a means by which we encourage students to upgrade their learning (3).
- Preparation for and involvement in a tutorial is the opportunity for many students to reflect on and process their learning into a more meaningful state – in other words, to ‘re-file’ it.
- Revision for examinations is another opportunity for review of previous learning such that understanding is deepened (Entwistle and Entwistle, 1992).
Reflection slows down activity, giving the time for the learner to process material of learning and link it with previous ideas.
Reflection enables learners to develop greater ‘ownership’ of the material of learning (Rogers, 1969).
Reflection will enhance the student’s ‘voice’ in her learning (Elbow, 1981).
A particularly important means by which reflective activity generally supports learning is through the encouragement of metacognition. (Ertmer and Newby, 1996).
Study skills programmes that support learners’ awareness of their learning processes seem to be more successful than those that focus on techniques (Main, 1985).
We suggested above that reflection occurs when we are dealing with material that is relatively complicated – or ill-structured. (King and Kitchener, 1994).
Just asking students to write a learning journal, for example, may bring benefits, but they will be haphazard.
learning journals, logs, diaries … with the intention of improving or supporting learning but are of many different forms. Used successfully in most disciplines including the sciences and mathematics (Moon, 1999a).
Portfolios … unreflective compilation of work, to collections of coursework and reading with reflective comments, to coursework with an attached overview, to something very akin to a learning journal.
- Reflection on work experience … to develop employment skills, or to use the experience as a basis for learning about self and personal functioning (eg Colling and Watton, 2000, Watton and Moon, 2002 – in preparation)
-
Reflection in work-based learning. (Boud and Garrick, 1999).
-
Reflective exercises: Examples are contained in Angelo and Cross, 1990; George and Cowan, 1999; Moon, 1999 and 1999a).
-
Reflection in peer and self assessment: self or peer assessment they are likely to be reflecting on the work in relation to their perception of how they think it should appear
-
Reflection in careers or personal development.
-
Reflection in APEL (accreditation of prior experiential learning
It has had a particularly strong role in professional education and development – with nursing, teacher education and social work as the principle examples.
An impetus to the thinking that underlies this section is the frequent observation that not all students find reflection easy when it is introduced as a specific requirement
Some, however, who may be good students otherwise, will not understand what is meant by it – and will ask ‘what is it that you want me to do?’
The discourses of some subjects are, by nature, more likely to require reflective activity ‘on paper’.
Academic reflection will be more structured.
We may be giving structures – such as the Kolb cycle – to follow.
In our private reflections, we do not systematically describe what we are about to reflect on – we just do it
From Moon (1999a)
Academic reflection is, therefore, more structured and more formal than what we will term ‘informal’ reflection.
Descriptive or deep
Reflection can be superficial and little more than descriptive or can be deep and transformative (and involved in the transformative stage of learning).
Reflection is used to make sense of unstructured situations in order to generate new knowledge. It is important to be clear that the activity might be introducing the skill of reflective learning or generating knowledge by using reflection to make sense of something.
Most students will have learnt that they should not use the first person singular in an academic environment.
(Which is where I feel my ‘voice’ is being compromised by obliging me to speak in a certain way.)
Most students will have learnt that they should not use the first person singular in an academic environment.
Descriptive writing:
This is a description of events or literature reports. There is no discussion beyond description. This writing is considered not to show evidence of reflection. It is important to acknowledge that some parts of a reflective account will need to describe the context – but in this case, writing does not go beyond description.
Descriptive reflection:
There is basically a description of events, but the account shows some evidence of deeper consideration in relatively descriptive language. There is no real evidence of the notion of alternative viewpoints in use.
Dialogic reflection:
This writing suggests that there is a ‘stepping back’ from the events and actions which leads to a different level of discourse. There is a sense of ‘mulling about’, discourse with self and an exploration of the role of self in events and actions. There is consideration of the qualities of judgements and of possible alternatives for explaining and hypothesising. The reflection is analytical or integrative, linking factors and perspectives.
Critical reflection:
This form of reflection, in addition to dialogic reflection, shows evidence that the learner is aware that the same actions and events may be seen in different contexts with different explanations associated with the contexts. They are influenced by ‘multiple historical and socio-political contexts’, for example.
(developed from Hatton and Smith, 1995)
A fair question is that since reflection is an encouragement for learners to follow the lines of their own thinking, to work without a curriculum – how can it be marked?
i.e. as the institution hasn’t put in place adequate systems to monitor my progress why don’t I do it myself and give myself marks out of ten too?
N.B. The message of this section is essentially that there is no one way to assess reflective work.
N.B. There are no clearly agreed generic criteria for reflection since different people see reflection as different processes (as has been demonstrated in the early sections) and they set reflective tasks in order to achieve different purposes.
To encourage a student to be reflective is to encourage the development of a habit of processing cognitive material that can lead the student to ideas that are beyond the curriculum, beyond learning defined by learning outcomes, and beyond those of the teacher who is managing the learning. Boud, D and Walker (1998)
‘Promoting reflection in professional courses: the challenge of context’, Studies in Higher Education, 23(2), pp191 – 206