Wednesday, 29 January 2014

What does being a reflective practitioner mean in practical terms?

It's all very well to talk about reflection as a desirable practice for the superlative teaching professional, however, I believe that the very idea of reflection is fraught with misunderstandings, misinterpretations, and pre-conceived judgements (probably the fault of teacher education programmes which flog reflection like a dead horse - citation - me and UOIT! Don't tell!).

In addition, there is more than one definition of what reflection actually is, what it encompasses in terms of action, and what it affords the teaching profession. John Dewey had a pretty clear idea of what it is, and what it means to think - in fact he wrote a book about it (How We Think, 1933). In this book he discusses thought as belief, imagination, stream of consciousness, and reflection (Dewey, 1933). Reading Dewey is as heavy-duty as reading Mezirow (!) so I will cite the work of Carol Rodgers who "distilled" four criteria that represent his concept of reflection:

1. Reflection is a meaning-making process;
2. it is a systematic, rigorous, disciplined way of thinking, with its roots in scientific inquiry;
3. it is socially constructed; and
4. requires attitudes which value self-growth and that of others. (Rodgers, 2002, p. 846).

What strikes me the most, and what changed my attitude to reflection as a professional practice is point 2. that reflection is rooted in scientific inquiry. In fact, the models for reflective practice, the scientific method, and for inquiry-based learning are startlingly similar to the point of being almost transmutable and certainly complementary...

Inquiry Based Learning.

Schön's Reflection in and on action.
The scientific method.

Research and analysis, and asking, creating, and discussing can ostensibly all involve reflection on action.  All these models are cyclical - here's another one:

This is Stephen Kemmis' (in MacIsaac, 1995) model of the cyclical nature of the action research process. 

I started this blog entry yesterday and subsequently took part in our class on reflection. I mentioned the similarities I found in the various models for reflection, action research, and the scientific method. Laura pointed out that perhaps one difference would be the inclusion of collaboration. I've reflected (ha ha) on this and come to the conclusion that the models are still largely interchangeable. When collaborating in reflection we might be doing this alone or with a trusted partner or Critical Friend. This term is accredited to Desmond Nuttall (1970's) and was defined by Costa and Kallick (1993) as:

"A critical friend can be defined as a trusted person who asks provocative questions, provides data to be examined through another lens, and offers critiques of a person’s work as a friend. A critical friend takes the time to fully understand the context of the work presented and the outcomes that the person or group is working toward. The friend is an advocate for the success of that work."

I see this definition as applying, to a large extent, to the collaboration inherent in that which would take place between persons involved in inquiry based practices, as well as those involved in experimentation/exploration using the scientific method. It is rare that one would be involved in either of the latter processes in the absence of reflection - whether that reflection be on one's own or with a Critical Friend. 

Reflection, according to Dewey, is "that process of reconstruction and reorganization of experience which adds to the meaning of experience" (Dewey, in Rodgers, 2002, p. 848). The function of reflection "is to make meaning: to formulate the relationships and continuities among the elements of an experience, between that experience and other experiences, between that experience and the knowledge that one carries, and between that knowledge and the knowledge produced by thinkers other than oneself" (Rodgers, 2002, p. 848).

To clarify Dewey's definition of an experience, it is "more than simply a matter of direct participation in events. It could be that, or it could be something as ephemeral as interaction with objects which one constructs in fancy. It could also be the solitary reading of a book or a discussion with others. What is important is that there is interaction between the person and his or her environment. The environment... is whatever conditions interact with personal needs, desires, purposes, and capacities to create the experience which is had" An experience, then, is not an experience unless it involves interaction between the self and another person, the material world, the natural world, an idea, or whatever constitutes the environment at hand" (Dewey, in Rodgers, 2002, p. 846).

Add to this, the description of experience per Aldous Huxley, "experience is not what happens to you, it's what you do with what happens to you" (Huxley, in Kegan, 1983, p. 11). 

So I would posit that the models I have offered for reflection, IBL, and the scientific method are almost interchangeable.

The next question is, why don't we all reflect. There is ample literature and there are, as demonstrated, numerous models and ways of engaging in reflection available to us. As discussed during class, the barriers to reflection in professional practice are many. Our group came up with:

1. Time
2. Organizational culture
3. Ignorance / education ... among others... (I've lost the notes we took... grrr). 

I'd like to focus on the second point since the first and last are both easy to understand and to overcome - if - point 2 is addressed.

"Working in bureaucratic settings has taught everyone to be compliant, to be rule governed, not to ask questions, seek alternatives or deal with competing values. People are supposed to follow orders from those at the top. Working to create more professional cultures in schools, however, calls upon people to engage in discussion to seek a collective vision and the practical means to achieve it. Instead of one leader and many followers, a leader ... works to facilitate leadership and encourage it among entire staff ... Developers, like others in the educational establishment, must define their success not by becoming yet another group of specialists, but rather by engaging in the building of a culture of inquiry and improved learning environments for students and teachers.' (Lieberman, 1989).

True, purposeful, and systemic reflexive practice cannot occur without the establishment of an organizational culture that supports collegiality (Handal, 1990). This to me equates with a model of shared leadership (Optimal Experience: Psychological Studies of Flow in Consciousness, Csikszentmihalyi, 1998) which, when successful, leads to shared cognition, creativity, and flow. In an organization where shared leadership exists, I believe that the barriers of time and ignorance would be quickly overcome. In an educational context, time would be allotted for teacher-leaders, for the shared experiences of critical friends, and for true collaboration in a framework where decisions are truly synergistic. The barrier of ignorance would be slowly broken down as the organization transforms itself from (most likely) principal-centric hierarchy to one that is shared.

And that's my two cents!

1 comment:

  1. This post made me think! Great use/comparison of frameworks and other relevant literature, Katie! I agree that the processes are similar, and that they reflect the model of scientific inquiry.
    In terms of the 3 barriers (or can they be considered conditions necessary), you raise great points. It reminds me of Virginia's discussions about the clarity committee as an organizational structure; also (as we discussed in class) the way that Finnish educational structures build in the time and capacity for this to happen. Though, as you pointed out early on when talking about your journey to reflective practice, even if the structures exist, there's also the need for personal "buy in" (for lack of a better term) and that is a challenge! I wonder if you wouldn't (at some future time) talk about what specifically happened when you took that class, and changed your thinking about reflective practice?
    I appreciate also you bringing forth the concept of the "critical friend," and I wonder how we can cultivate that in educators or professionals? It seems to me a few things need to happen for this model: the first learner needs to buy into reflective practice and adopt a set of dispositions and maybe skills for his/her own acceptance of reflective practice; the second learner also needs to cultivate "critical friend' dispositions. Both need to be able to assume the dual/partnered/collaborative roles. Might it be that learning designed to promote reflective practice must emphasize "critical friend" just as much as "self-reflective" aspects?

    ReplyDelete