I was first formally introduced to the concept of reflective practice whilst studying on my PGCE way back in 2001/2. Part of the requirements of my course was to keep a weekly journal which would be used to feed into a 1500 word reflective assignment at the end of the year. I started with due diligence however found that being on teaching practice 3 days a week and in lectures for the other two days and evenings / weekends taken up with reading around my subject and putting together teaching resources keeping a diary soon fell by the wayside. However, just ‘cos I didn’t write it down didn’t mean I wasn’t reflecting. Some of the lessons I taught were repeated which meant I could try something out in one session and if it didn’t work I could tweak it for the next one.
I left teaching, as I wanted a career change & get into libraries, and the next 6 months were spent initially feeling sorry for myself, then I started reflecting, what could I do to improve so I started asking for feedback , volunteering, shadowing, visiting, temping, completing short courses & so on and it paid off. Before I started work in my current place of work I worked for a young person’s information service and the culture of reflection was very much engrained, I would have supervision every 6 weeks and at the weekly meetings we were expected to bring case studies to discuss and evaluate practice.
In Elaine’s piece about the ‘Reflective writing workshop she talks about the the need for taking action after the event, reflecting quickly so as not to lose that ‘gut feeling’ you have . When I moved in to academic libraries I think this is something I was good at, studying for my MA & being part of the library’s Learning and Development Team definitely helped. Then I got promoted to a post which had been been vacant for about four months and the next 12 months kinda became the wilderness years in terms of reflection and my time became consumed with learning the job, taking part in a full-scale project… That’s not to say I didn’t reflect on work practices, I did, I just don’t think I engaged much in personal reflection. I think now I’m turning a corner, at least I hope so, I’m consciously making an effort to write down my thoughts when I’ve attended an event as soon as possible afterwards, having the work blog helps. Aside from the initial reflection, something I need to do is also reflect on an experience later on down the line, say 6 – 12 months after the event, to see what impact its had, whether my thoughts / feelings are the same, what’s changed.
Reflective practice, work in progress, me thinks.
My cat in reflective mood

