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Teachers as Reflective
Practitioners /PGDT 422/
Reflective Thinking and
Reflective practice
BY AKLILU Y.
3/6/2023 2
UNIT 1
REFLECTIVE THINKING
AND
REFLECTIVE PRACTICE
3/6/2023 3
• Brainstorming
• Have you ever afraid of
becoming a teacher? Why?
• What kind of difficulties
you think you will face by
being a teacher?
3/6/2023 4
Learning outcomes
By the end of this module, the students should be able to:
– Define the concept of reflective practice;
– Understand the meanings of reflection-for-action,
reflection-in-action, and reflection-on-action;
– Analyze the relationship between professional knowledge
and reflection in action;
– Discuss the crisis of confidence in professional
knowledge
– Explain the idea of ‘reflection in action’
– Understand professional contexts for reflection-in-
action;
– Analyze the structure of reflection-in-action;
 Understand the reflection-on-action;
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Activity
• What is reflection?
• What is reflective thinking?
• How to become a Reflective Thinker?
1. Attempt individually
2. compare your definition
a. in pair/2/
b. in two pairs/4/
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Section One Reflection
• The term "reflection" is derived
from the Latin term reflectere --
meaning "to bend back."
• A mirror does precisely(exactly)
this, bend back the light, making
visible what is apparent to others,
but a mystery to us -- namely,
what our faces look like.
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3/6/2023 8
Reflection
• Reflection is an aspect of thinking,
where thinking is a skill. ‘Like any
other skill’ the skill for reflection can
only develop when the learners
directly involve in it.
• How can you define reflection in your
own words?
3/6/2023 9
Reflection
• Reflection is an everyday process.
We reflect on a range of everyday
problems and situations all the
time:
What went well?
What didn’t? Why?
How do I feel about it?
3/6/2023 10
Reflection involves…
3/6/2023 11
• Reflective Teaching (RT) is a self-
assessment of teaching, wherein
an instructor examines His/Her
Pedagogy articulates reasons
and strengths for their strategies,
and identifies areas for revision or
improvement.
3/6/2023 12
• When teachers practice reflective
teaching, they look back at their
teaching,
• student responses, student success
and student behavior.
• They evaluate the lesson and how the
students received it.
• They become more aware of not only
what they teach but also why and how
they teach it.
3/6/2023 13
Reflection
• Reflection is the key that opens the
door to understanding ourselves in
relation to core ethical values”
• Ultimately, the outcome of reflection is
learning (Meziros, 1981).
1. It widens our perspective on a
problem (broadens knowledge)
2. It helps us develop strategies for
dealing with it (develop skills)
3. It helps us acquire new insights into
our behaviour (changes attitudes)
3/6/2023 14
Cont’d
Reflective—Searching for information
and solutions to problems that arise in
the classroom;
• identifying the strengths and needs of
individual students.
• This can be done in the midst (the
middle or central part of something)of
an activity or as an activity in itself.
• The key to reflection is learning how to
take perspective on one’s own actions
and experience—in other words, to
examine that experience rather than
just living it.
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Cont’d
• Dewey,1933) defined reflection as the
active, persistent and careful
consideration of any belief or supposed
form of knowledge in the light of the
grounds that support it and the further
conclusions to which it tends.
• Reflection is ‘An activity in which people
recapture /recall/ their experience, think
about it, mull /think over/ consider/ it over and
evaluate it.’
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• Reflection means thinking about what
one is doing.
• It entails a process of contemplation
(filling or attitud) with openness to
being changed, a willingness to learn,
and a sense of responsibility for doing
one’s best. ( Jay, 2003)
3/6/2023 17
Cont’d
• The term reflection may be used to
refer to deliberate thinking about
something that has already taken
place.
• A thinking process begins with a
dilemma that suggests alternatives,
and so thinking is evoked by confusion.
• Reflection involves working toward a
better understanding of the problem
and ways of solving it.
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•Why We Reflect?
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Why We Reflect?
Reflection can help us to feel more aware of
and confident in ourselves generally, and in
our teaching role.
It can help us to:
 Make the best use of the knowledge
available.
 Be conscious of our potential for bias &
discrimination.
 Challenge & develop the existing
professional knowledge base
 Maximize our own opportunities for
learning.
 Recognize what we do well so that we can
apply these skills in other situations
3/6/2023 20
Cont’d
• Improve professional judgment
• Learn from successes and mistakes to
enhance development
• Plan for future situations and therefore
respond more positively to change
• In general "Reflection leads to growth of the
individual –
 morally,
 personally,
 psychologically, and
 emotionally, as well as cognitively".
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Reflection can help us to:
• better understand our strengths
and weaknesses
• identify and question our
underlying values and beliefs
• acknowledge and challenge possible
assumptions on which we base our
ideas, feelings and actions
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Cont’d
• recognize areas of potential bias or
discrimination
• acknowledge our fears, and
• identify possible inadequacies or areas for
improvement.
• Learning Through Reflection
We learn by experiences that allow us to
– Absorb (read, hear, feel)
– Do (activity)
– Interact (socialize)
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Activity
• What is Reflective thinking?
3/6/2023 24
What is Reflective thinking?
• Theorists and researchers from
different fields maintain different
perspectives on the meaning of
reflection; however, the notion
usually refers to the foundation of
higher-order thinking and
learning.
3/6/2023 25
Cont’d
• Reflective thinking is a series of
logical rational steps based on the
scientific method of defining,
analyzing, and solving a problem.
• There must be resources that are
already active in the mind, since
we cannot force a brain to think
out of nothing.
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Cont’d
• There is a natural resource that
‘activates’ the mind.
• We may recapitulate by saying
that the origin of thinking is some
perplexity (lack of understanding),
confusion, or doubt.
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• Thinking is not a case of
spontaneous combustion (the
process of burrning); it does not
occur just on “general principles."
There is something specific which
occasions and evokes it.
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Cont’d
• Critical thinking and reflective thinking
are often used synonymously.
• Critical thinking is used to describe "...
the use of those cognitive skills or
strategies that increase the probability
of a desirable outcome...
• thinking that is
– purposeful,
– reasoned and goal directed
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Cont’d
• the kind of thinking involved in
– solving problems,
– formulating inferences,
– calculating likelihoods, and
– making decisions when the thinker is
using skills that are thoughtful and
effective for the particular context
and type of thinking task.
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Cont’d
• Critical thinking is sometimes called
directed thinking because it focuses
on a desired outcome.
• Critical thinking, in general, refers
to higher-order thinking that
questions assumptions. Critical
thinking is “thinking about thinking.”
• It is a way of deciding whether a
claim is true, false or sometimes
true and sometimes false, or partly
true and partly false.
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Cont’d
• The list of core critical thinking skills
includes
 observation,
 interpretation,
 analysis,
 inference,
 evaluation,
 explanation, and
 meta-cognition.
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• Critical thinking employs not only logic but
broad intellectual criteria such as
 clarity,
 credibility,
 accuracy,
 precision,
 relevance,
 depth,
 breadth,
 significance, and fairness.
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Critical thinking calls for the ability to:
• Recognize problems, to find workable
means for meeting those problems
• Understanding the importance of
prioritization and order of precedence in
problem solving
• Gather pertinent(relevant) information
• Recognize unstated assumptions and
values
• Comprehend and use language with
accuracy, clarity, and discernment
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Cont’d
• Interpret data, to appraise evidence and
evaluate arguments
• Draw warranted conclusions and
generalizations
• Put to test the conclusions and
generalizations at which one arrives
• Reconstruct one’s patterns of beliefs on
the basis of wider experience
• Render accurate judgments about
specific things and qualities in everyday
life.
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• “Reflective thinking is the process of creating
and clarifying the meaning of experience
(past or present) in terms of self (self in
relation to self and self in relation to the
world.)”
• Reflective thinking is a part of the critical
thinking process referring specifically to the
processes of
• analyzing,
• evaluating, and
• making judgments about what has happened.
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Cont’d
• Reflective thinking is an active,
persistent, and careful consideration
of a belief or supposed form of
knowledge, of the grounds that support
that knowledge, and the further
conclusions to which that knowledge
leads.
3/6/2023 37
• Reflective thinking, on the other hand, is a part of the
critical thinking process referring specifically to the
processes of analyzing and making judgments about
what has happened.
• In summary, critical thinking involves a wide range of
thinking skills leading toward desirable outcomes and
reflective thinking focuses on the process of making
judgments about what has happened.
3/6/2023 38
Cont’d
• Learners are aware of and control their
learning by actively participating in
reflective thinking –
• assessing
 what they know,
 what they need to know, and
 how they bridge that gap – during
learning situations.
3/6/2023 39
Good reflective thinking is a process
where an individual:
• Determines what information is needed
for understanding the issue at hand
• Accesses and gathers the available
information.
• Gathers the opinions of reliable
sources in related fields
• Synthesizes /produce/ the information
and opinions
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Cont’d
• Considers the synthesis from all
perspectives and frames of
reference
• Finally, creates some reasonable
temporary meaning that maybe
reconsidered and modified as one
learns more relevant information
and opinions.
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Reflective thinking
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General features of reflective thinking
• Perplexity/puzzle, confusion, doubt.
• The teacher has to provide a problem
or scenario
• Conjectural anticipation/guessing the
reasons behind.
• The teacher provides many
opportunities to engage students in
gathering information to look for
possible causes and solutions.
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• Careful survey (examination
,inspection, exploration, analysis)
• The teacher will give activity
sheets to help students evaluate
the evidence they gather and
questions that prompt them to
consider alternatives and
implications of their ideas
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• Consequent elaboration of the tentative
hypothesis/suggest solutions.
• The teacher will prepare questions and
activities that prompt students to draw
conclusions from the evidence they
gathered and pose solutions
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• Taking one stand upon the
projected hypothesis as a plan of
action,
• doing something overtly to bring about the
anticipated result and thereby testing the
hypothesis/
• evaluate and monitor the
implementation of the solution.
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• What is reflective
practice?
3/6/2023 47
• A ‘reflective practitioner’ is
someone who, at regular
intervals, looks back at the work
they do, and
• the work process, and considers
how they can improve.
• They ‘reflect’ on the work they
have done.
3/6/2023 48
• You need to learn from the experiences, and
mistakes of others, you need to look at what
you are doing and how others are doing the
same thing;
• can anything be improved?
• Can anything be done better?
3/6/2023 49
• Reflective practice
• A process that helps teachers think
about
• what happened,
• why it happened, and
• what else could have been done
• to reach their goals (Cruickshank &
Applegate, 1981).
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• Reflective practice is the ability
to reflect on one's actions so as
to engage in a process of
continuous learning
• Your engagement with reflective
practice is an essential part of
your success in your profession.
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• Reflective practice can be an
important tool in practice-based
professional learning
• settings where people learn from their
own professional experiences, rather
than from formal learning or
knowledge transfer
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• The practice of analyzing one’s
 actions,
 decisions, or
 products by focusing on one’s process
for achieving them (Killion&Todnem, 1991).
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• Reflective practice can help you –
as a new practitioner –
• to identify how to review and improve
your own teaching.
• As an experienced practitioner, you
may use reflective practice as an
aid to lifelong learning and continuous
improvement.
3/6/2023 54
Cont’d
• A practice for reflection can vary in terms of
how often,
• how much, and
• why reflection gets done.
• Reflective practice involves learning
from experience.
3/6/2023 55
Cont’d
• It is important to remember that
reflection is not the same as reflective
practice.
• Reflective practice is an extension of
reflection:
• while reflection may lead to thinking
about an event in great detail and
gaining new knowledge,
3/6/2023 56
Reflective practice is…
3/6/2023 57
Process of reflection
• Reflection engages in the process of carrying back and
forth between thinking and action.
• However, the process may appear differently in different
situations.
• One useful way to understand this complexity is to
consider when it takes place.
• There are two categories that simplify
the concept:
• Reflection-in-action (thinking on your feet)
• Reflection-on-action (retrospective thinking//thinking back).
3/6/2023 58
• Reflection-in-action is defined as
the ability of professionals to
‘think what they are doing while
they are doing it’.
• It is the ability to think on your
feet, and apply previous
experience to new situations.
3/6/2023 59
Cont’d
• Reflection-on-action is a reflection after the
event consciously undertaken, and often
documented.
• Reflection-on-action is defined as a process
in which individuals reflect on actions and
thoughts after they have taken place.
3/6/2023 60
Reflection process
3/6/2023 61
Cont’d
• Reflective in action is that process that
allows us to reshape what we are
working on, while we are working on it.
• It is that on-going experimentation that
helps us find a viable solution.
• In this, we do not use a “trial-and-
error” method.
• Rather, our actions are much more
reasoned and purposeful than that.
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Level of Reflection
• There are three major levels of
reflective practice .They are:
• An initial level focused on teaching
functions, actions or skills, generally
considering teaching episodes 9one
part of story) as isolated events.
• A more advanced level considering the
theory and rationale for current
practice.
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• A higher order
• where teachers examine the ethical,
social and political consequences of
their teaching, grappling with the
ultimate purposes of schooling.
• to foster consistency between
supported theory
• (what they say they do and believe)
and theory-in-use (what they actually
do in the classroom).
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• Technical Reflection
• At the first level, teachers’ reflections
focus on strategies and methods used
to reach predetermined goals.
• It is the lowest level of reflection.
3/6/2023 65
• At the first level, teachers’ reflections focus on
strategies and methods used to reach
predetermined goals.
• They are concerned with what works in the
classroom to keep students quiet and to
maintain order, rather than with any
consideration of the value of such goals as
ends in themselves.
• It is the lowest level of reflection.
3/6/2023 66
• Typical questions the teacher asks at the
level of technical reflection are:
• Did I spend too much time on group work
today?
• How can I keep students on-task?
• Did I have enough (too many) activities?
• How can I get students to pay better
attention?
3/6/2023 67
• Contextual Reflection
• Teachers engaging in Contextual
reflection attempt to understand the
theoretical basis for classroom
practice and to foster consistency
between supported theory
• (what they say they do and believe)
and theory-in-use (what they actually
do in the classroom).
3/6/2023 68
• Teachers reflecting at this level can determine
when there is conflict between what they
practice and what they preach (e.g., seeing
themselves as humanistic yet belittling
students when they persist in disobeying
rules).
3/6/2023 69
• Typical questions the teacher asks at the level
of pedagogical reflection are:
• How can I improve learning for all my
students?
• How can I build in better accountability for
cooperative learning tasks?
• Am I giving my students the opportunity to
develop decision-making skills?
3/6/2023 70
• Critical Reflection
• Critical reflectivity is interchangeably used as the
dialectical level.
• At this stage, teachers reflect on the moral and
ethical implications and consequences of classroom
practices on students.
• Critical reflection is mostly considered as a higher-
order level of reflection. It adds the following
dimensions:
3/6/2023 71
• Typical questions the teacher asks at the level
of critical reflection are:
• Do all students in my class have daily opportunities
to be successful?
• Who is being included and who is being excluded in
this classroom practice?
• How might the ways I group students affect
individual student’s opportunity for success?
• Does this classroom practice promote equity?
• Do I have practices that differentially favor
particular groups of students (e.g., males, females)?
3/6/2023 72
Reflective level
3/6/2023 73
• Case 1.
• Zemen is very intellectual High school
biology teacher. She believed that
education has to equip students not only
with theoretical knowledge but also the
life skills that help them to survive
outside of the school, as result, in most of
her lesson, she manages to prepare
examples and cases accordingly in order
to aware students the current challenges
like gender stereotypes and HIV/AID and
their impacts.
• 1. Which level of reflection Zemen has
practiced? Why?
3/6/2023 74
• Case 2.
• Ayele is a teacher in primary school. After
each of his class, he evaluates his and his
students actual activities against his lesson
plan to know whether he achieved them or
not. Which of level of reflection Ayele has
practice? Why?
3/6/2023 75
• Discuss the benefits of
reflection for
teacher
and
students?
3/6/2023 76
• The benefits of reflection for learners
• Reflection helps learners to:
• understand what they already know (individual).
• Students improve their basic academic skills.
• identify what they need to know in order to advance
understanding of the subject (contextual).
• Students develop a deeper understanding of subject
matter
3/6/2023 77
The benefits of reflection for teacher
• Reflection enables a teacher to:
• Make the best use of the knowledge
available.
• Avoid past mistakes.
• solve a problem or address an issue in the
classroom
• Maximise our own opportunities for learning.
• It can improve the quality of your work.
• It helps you to plan for the future.
• It helps you respond more positively to
change.
• You can learn from the experience of others.
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Typology of reflection
• Three dimensions of reflective
thought: descriptive, comparative,
and critical.
I. Descriptive reflection
• Descriptive reflection, the first
dimension of reflection in our typology,
involves the intellectual process of’
setting the problem;’’ that is,
determining what it is that will become
the matter for reflection.
3/6/2023 79
Cont’d
• Descriptive describe the matter for
reflection
– what is happening?
– Is this working, and for whom?
– For whom is it not working?
– How do I know?
– How am I feeling?
– What am I pleased and/or concerned about?
– What do I not understand?
Fundamentally, description involves answering
the question, ‘‘what’s happening?’’
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II. Comparative reflection
• It involves thinking about the matter for
reflection from a number of different frame or
perspectives.
• As compared to a technical approach
to teaching, in which a teacher
accepts a problem immediately and
sets about trying to solve it,
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III. Critical reflection
• Critical reflection, the third dimension of
reflection in our typology, describes the
result of carefully considering a problem that
has been set in light of multiple perspectives.
• critical reflection is rather the constant
returning to one’s own understanding of the
problem at hand.
• This is the process in which, one ‘‘may then
find a way of integrating, or choosing among,
the values at stake in the situation’’.
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There are three types of nature of
reflection.
• Returning to experience
• It refers to recollection / recalling of
memory situations, events and
activities that happened in the past.
• description of what you did or plan to
do (and why)
• description of how you approached
something or how it worked and how it did
not.
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Connections
• Reflective connections are the most frequent
source of influence on teachers’ practical
decision making.
• In these moments of reflection, teachers
connect a particular aspect of their teaching
experience with plans for instruction, moving
from experience to reflection to action.
• The teacher may back to his/her experience
as student and ask questions to connect his
past experience to his/her presence .
• For instance:
3/6/2023 84
• How do I want to be learned in high school
the same subject I am teaching?
• What was the feeling back there as a
student?
• Did you feel good or bad when you think of
your experience as a student? Why?
• Which teacher was my favorite? Why?
• Am I teaching my students the same way that
I loved to be learned as student?
3/6/2023 85
Evaluation
• It refers to evaluation of experiences and development
of a teacher.
• The subcategories of evaluation are:
• giving an opinion
• examining what you have learned.
• drawing conclusions about your own development
• evaluating your knowledge or functioning
• investigating whether you have achieved your learning
objective
• examining what you found difficult and progressing
3/6/2023 86
Reflection as thinking process
• The domain of thinking Processes encompasses a range
of cognitive, affective and meta cognitive knowledge,
skills and behaviors.
• It is organized in three dimensions:
• Reasoning, processing and inquiry
• Creativity
• Reflection, evaluation and meta cognition.
• Means (knowledge about own thinking:
• knowledge of your own thoughts and
• the factors that influence your thinking
3/6/2023 87
Reasoning, processing and inquiry
• The Reasoning, processing and inquiry
• dimension encompasses the knowledge,
skills and behaviours required to enable
teacher students to find out the world around
them, and to use critical thinking to analyse
and evaluate information they encounter.
• Students learn to assemble and question
information and develop opinions based on
informed judgments.
• They also develop the capacity to transform
information into coherent knowledge
structures.
3/6/2023 88
Creativity
• The capacity to think creatively is a central
component of being able to solve problems
and be innovative.
• In the Creativity dimension, teacher students
learn to seek innovative alternatives and use
their imagination to generate possibilities.
• They learn to take risks with their thinking
and make new connections.
3/6/2023 89
Reflection, evaluation and meta cognition
• Learning is enhanced when individuals develop the
capacity to reflect on, and improve their existing ideas
and beliefs.
• In the Reflection, evaluation and meta cognition
dimension, teacher students learn to reflect on what
they know and develop awareness that there is more
to know.
• They learn to question their perspectives and those of
others.
• They evaluate the validity of their own and others’
ideas.
• They also develop their meta cognitive skills in
planning, monitoring and evaluating their own thinking
processes and strategies.
3/6/2023 90
Some strategies to help with daily
reflection
• Daily reflections have five major roles.
• They:act as a record or diary of things
that were done each day
a. give program leaders and assistants
feedback about the relative success of
an activity is
b. give participants an opportunity to
practice their writing skills
3/6/2023 91
C. give participants an opportunity to ask
questions, seek clarity, express concerns:
which activities did you like and why? which ones did
you not like and why? do you have any questions
about the activities?
d. develop and increase meta cognitive
awareness in participants
3/6/2023 92
Some possible question that can be used during
daily reflections are
1) What were my strengths/weaknesses?
How have I improved?
2) What can I continue to work on?
3) How do I feel about my lesson? Why?
4) How effective was the pacing of my lesson?
5) How much of a chance did the students have
to speak?
6) What did I notice in the class?
7) What would I do next time?
3/6/2023 93
Unit Two
Reflective Teaching
3/6/2023 94
Reflective Teaching
Different scholars define teaching in
different ways. Some of the definitions
are teaching is
• “… an interaction process, primarily
involving classroom talk, which takes
place between teacher and students
and occurs during certain definable
activities”
• “ … interpersonal activity directed towards
learning by one or more persons “
3/6/2023 95
• Contemporary educators prefer to
describe teaching based on the
common attributes suggested by many
authorities than defining it.
Accordingly teaching is
– An activity or action. You can see teaching
take place; you need not (and. Some would
argue, should not) infer it from learning.
– A process. It involves a series of actions
and decisions of the teacher
3/6/2023 96
• An interpersonal activity and/or
process. Interpersonal refers to the
fact that teaching involves interactions
between a teacher and one or more
students. Most often the interactions
are verbal and two-way.
3/6/2023 97
Characteristics of A good teacher
• From that consultation, and from
other professional discussions in
Ethiopia, the following profile of a
Good Teacher is proposed:
• Has a love of the profession
• Has a wide and up-to-date subject
knowledge
• Maintains an attractive and
supportive learning environment
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• Creates a safe and ordered environment in
which all students are able to learn
• Plans effectively for student involvement and
learning
• Forms excellent working relationships with
colleagues
• Cares for the progress and wellbeing of
students
3/6/2023 99
Reflective teaching
• Reflective teaching means
– looking at what you do in the classroom,
– thinking about why you do it, and
– thinking about if it works - a process of
self-observation and self-evaluation.
• By collecting information about what goes on
in our classroom, and by analyzing and
evaluating this information, we identify and
explore our own practices and underlying
beliefs.
3/6/2023 100
• This may then lead to changes
and improvements in our teaching.
• Reflective teaching is therefore a
means of professional
development which begins in our
classroom.
3/6/2023 101
characteristics of reflective practice
1 Reflective teaching implies an
active concern with aims and
consequences, as well as means
and technical efficiency.
2 Reflective teaching is applied in a
cyclical or spiraling process, in
which teachers monitor, evaluate
and revise their own practice
continuously.
3/6/2023 102
3 Reflective teaching requires
competence in methods of
evidence - based classroom enquiry, to
support the progressive development
of higher standards of teaching.
4 Reflective teaching requires attitudes
of open - mindedness, responsibility
and wholeheartedness.
3/6/2023 103
5. Reflective teaching, professional
learning and personal fulfilment are
enhanced through collaboration and
dialogue with colleagues .
6. Reflective Teaching enables teachers
to creatively mediate externally
developed frameworks for teaching and
learning .
3/6/2023 104
The Reflective Teacher
• Each level of reflection is structured to
parallel Bloom's taxonomy
• Assume that a teacher looked back on a
lesson (or project, unit, course, etc) they have
just taught.
• What sample questions might they ask
themselves as they move from lower to higher
order reflection?
3/6/2023 105
• (Note: it does mean that all questions are
asked after lesson - feel free to pick a few that
work for you.)
• Remember that each level can be used to
support mastery of the new Common Core
standards.
3/6/2023 106
• Bloom's Remembering: What did I do?
Teacher Reflection: What was the lesson? Did
it address all the content? Was it completed
on time? How did students "score" on the
assessment?
3/6/2023 107
• Bloom's Understanding: What was important
about what I did? Did I meet my goals?
• Teacher Reflection:
– Can I explain the major components of the lesson?
– Do I understand how they connect with the previous
/ next unit of study?
– Where does this unit fit into the curriculum?
– What instructional strategies were used?
– Did I follow best practices and address the
standards?
3/6/2023 108
• Bloom's Application: When did I do this
before? Where could I use this again?
Teacher Reflection: Did I build on content,
product or process from previous lessons?
How does this lesson scaffold the learning for
the next lesson? How could I adapt the
instructional approach to another lesson?
How could this lesson be modified for
different learners?
3/6/2023 109
• Bloom's Analysis: Do I see any patterns or
relationships in what I did?
Teacher Reflection: What background knowledge
and skills did I assume students were bringing to the
lesson? Were the instructional strategies I used the
right ones for this assignment? Do I see any patterns
in how I approached the lesson - such as pacing,
grouping? Do I see patterns in my teaching style - for
example do I comment after every student reply?
What were the results of the approach I used - was it
effective, or could I have eliminated or reorganized
steps?
3/6/2023 110
• Bloom's Evaluation: How well did I do? What
worked? What do I need to improve?
Teacher Reflection: What are we learning and is it
important? Were my assumptions about student
background knowledge and skills accurate? Were any
elements of the lesson more effective than other
elements? Did some aspects need improvement?
Were the needs of all learners met? What levels of
mastery did students reach? What have I learned
about my strengths and my areas in need of
improvement? How am I progressing as a teacher?
3/6/2023 111
• Bloom's Creation: What should I do next? What's my
plan / design?
Teacher Reflection: How would I incorporate the
best aspects of this lesson in the future? What
changes would I make to correct areas in need of
improvement? How can I best use my strengths to
improve? What steps should I take or resources
should I use to meet my challenges? Is there training
or networking that would help me to meet my
professional goals? What suggestions do I have for
our leadership or my peers to improve our learning
environment?
3/6/2023 112
• Reflective teaching therefore implies a more
systematic process of collecting, recording and
analyzing our thoughts and observations, as
well as those of our students, and then going
on to making changes.
• If a lesson went well we can describe it and
think about why it was successful.
3/6/2023 113
• If the students didn't understand a language
point we introduced we need to think about
what we did and why it may have been
unclear.
• If students are misbehaving - what were they
doing, when and why?
3/6/2023 114
Beginning the process of reflection
• You may begin a process of reflection in
response to a particular problem that has
arisen with one or your classes, or simply as a
way of finding out more about your teaching.
• You may decide to focus on a particular class
of students, for example how you deal with
incidents of misbehavior or how you can
encourage your students to speak more
English in class.
3/6/2023 115
• The first step is to gather information about
what happens in the class. Here are some
different ways of doing this.
• Teacher diary
This is the easiest way to begin a process of
reflection since it is purely personal. After
each lesson you write in a notebook about
what happened.
3/6/2023 116
• You may also describe your own reactions and
feelings and those you observed on the part of
the students.
• You are likely to begin to pose questions about
what you have observed.
• Diary writing does require a certain discipline
in taking the time to do it on a regular basis.
3/6/2023 117
Peer observation
• Invite a colleague to come into your class to collect
information about your lesson.
• This may be with a simple observation task or
through note taking.
• This will relate back to the area you have identified
to reflect upon.
• For example, you might ask your colleague to focus
on which students contribute most in the lesson,
what different patterns of interaction occur or how
you deal with errors.
3/6/2023 118
• Recording lessons
Video or audio recordings of lessons can
provide very useful information for reflection.
You may do things in class you are not aware
of or there may be things happening in the
class that as the teacher you do not normally
see.
3/6/2023 119
• Video recordings can be useful in showing you
aspects of your own behaviour.
– Where do you stand?
– Who do you speak to?
– How do you come across to the students?
3/6/2023 120
• Student feedback
You can also ask your students what they think
about what goes on in the classroom.
• Their opinions and perceptions can add a
different and valuable perspective.
• This can be done with simple questionnaires
or learning diaries for example.
3/6/2023 121
• What to do next
Once you have some information recorded
about what goes on in your classroom, what
do you do?
3/6/2023 122
• Audio recordings can be useful for considering
aspects of teacher talk.
– How much do you talk?
– What about?
– Are instructions and explanations clear?
– How much time do you allocate to student talk?
– How do you respond to student talk?
3/6/2023 123
• Think
You may have noticed patterns occurring in
your teaching through your observation.
• You may also have noticed things that you
were previously unaware of.
• You may have been surprised by some of your
students' feedback. You may already have
ideas for changes to implement.
3/6/2023 124
• Talk
Just by talking about what you have
discovered - to a supportive colleague or even
a friend - you may be able to come up with
some ideas for how to do things differently.
– If you have colleagues who also wish to develop
their teaching using reflection as a tool, you can
meet to discuss issues. Discussion can be based
around scenarios from your own classes.
3/6/2023 125
• Using a list of statements about teaching beliefs (for
example, pairwork is a valuable activity in the
language class or lexis is more important than
grammar) you can discuss which ones you agree or
disagree with, and which ones are reflected in your
own teaching giving evidence from your self-
observation.
3/6/2023 126
Read
• You may decide that you need to find out
more about a certain area.
• There are plenty of websites for teachers of
English now where you can find useful
teaching ideas, or more academic articles.
• There are also magazines for teachers where
you can find articles on a wide range of topics.
3/6/2023 127
• Or if you have access to a library or bookshop,
there are plenty of books for English language
teachers.
Ask
Pose questions to websites or magazines to
get ideas from other teachers. Or if you have a
local teachers' association or other
opportunities for in-service training, ask for a
session on an area that interests you.
3/6/2023 128
Conclusion
• Reflective teaching is a cyclical process,
because once you start to implement changes,
then the reflective and evaluative cycle begins
again.
– What are you doing?
– Why are you doing it?
– How effective is it?
– How are the students responding?
– How can you do it better?
3/6/2023 129
• As a result of your reflection you may decide
to do something in a different way, or you may
just decide that what you are doing is the best
way. And that is what professional
development is all about.
3/6/2023 130
How to become a Reflective Thinker?
• Good reflective thinking is a process where an
individual:
– determines what information is needed for understanding
the issue at hand
– accesses and gathers the available information
– gathers the opinions of reliable sources in related fields
– synthesizes the information and opinions
– considers the synthesis from all perspectives and frames of
reference
– finally, creates some plausible temporary meaning that
may be reconsidered and modified as one learns more
relevant information and opinions
Cynthia Mazow: Learning, Design, and Technology Stamford University
3/6/2023 131
Reflective Thinking Dimensions
The most complete listing of reflective skills is found in Weast (1996)
and were arragned and modified in a way to help us reflect:
• Identify the reasons and the evidence
– Identify the author's conclusion
– Identify vague and ambiguous language
– Identify value assumptions and value conflicts
– Identify descriptive assumptions
– Evaluate statistical reasoning
– Evaluate sampling and measurements
– Identify omitted information
– Gathers available information of reliable sources
• Evaluate logical reasoning
– Synthesizes the information and opinions from all perspectives and fremes
of reference
• Makes appropriate judgements
– Articulate one's own values in thoughtful, fair-minded way (objective, well
balanced, and suffient complex)
3/6/2023 132

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Reflective Thinking and Reflective practice - Copy.ppt

  • 1. Teachers as Reflective Practitioners /PGDT 422/ Reflective Thinking and Reflective practice
  • 4. • Brainstorming • Have you ever afraid of becoming a teacher? Why? • What kind of difficulties you think you will face by being a teacher? 3/6/2023 4
  • 5. Learning outcomes By the end of this module, the students should be able to: – Define the concept of reflective practice; – Understand the meanings of reflection-for-action, reflection-in-action, and reflection-on-action; – Analyze the relationship between professional knowledge and reflection in action; – Discuss the crisis of confidence in professional knowledge – Explain the idea of ‘reflection in action’ – Understand professional contexts for reflection-in- action; – Analyze the structure of reflection-in-action;  Understand the reflection-on-action; 3/6/2023 5
  • 6. Activity • What is reflection? • What is reflective thinking? • How to become a Reflective Thinker? 1. Attempt individually 2. compare your definition a. in pair/2/ b. in two pairs/4/ 3/6/2023 6
  • 7. Section One Reflection • The term "reflection" is derived from the Latin term reflectere -- meaning "to bend back." • A mirror does precisely(exactly) this, bend back the light, making visible what is apparent to others, but a mystery to us -- namely, what our faces look like. 3/6/2023 7
  • 9. Reflection • Reflection is an aspect of thinking, where thinking is a skill. ‘Like any other skill’ the skill for reflection can only develop when the learners directly involve in it. • How can you define reflection in your own words? 3/6/2023 9
  • 10. Reflection • Reflection is an everyday process. We reflect on a range of everyday problems and situations all the time: What went well? What didn’t? Why? How do I feel about it? 3/6/2023 10
  • 12. • Reflective Teaching (RT) is a self- assessment of teaching, wherein an instructor examines His/Her Pedagogy articulates reasons and strengths for their strategies, and identifies areas for revision or improvement. 3/6/2023 12
  • 13. • When teachers practice reflective teaching, they look back at their teaching, • student responses, student success and student behavior. • They evaluate the lesson and how the students received it. • They become more aware of not only what they teach but also why and how they teach it. 3/6/2023 13
  • 14. Reflection • Reflection is the key that opens the door to understanding ourselves in relation to core ethical values” • Ultimately, the outcome of reflection is learning (Meziros, 1981). 1. It widens our perspective on a problem (broadens knowledge) 2. It helps us develop strategies for dealing with it (develop skills) 3. It helps us acquire new insights into our behaviour (changes attitudes) 3/6/2023 14
  • 15. Cont’d Reflective—Searching for information and solutions to problems that arise in the classroom; • identifying the strengths and needs of individual students. • This can be done in the midst (the middle or central part of something)of an activity or as an activity in itself. • The key to reflection is learning how to take perspective on one’s own actions and experience—in other words, to examine that experience rather than just living it. 3/6/2023 15
  • 16. Cont’d • Dewey,1933) defined reflection as the active, persistent and careful consideration of any belief or supposed form of knowledge in the light of the grounds that support it and the further conclusions to which it tends. • Reflection is ‘An activity in which people recapture /recall/ their experience, think about it, mull /think over/ consider/ it over and evaluate it.’ 3/6/2023 16
  • 17. • Reflection means thinking about what one is doing. • It entails a process of contemplation (filling or attitud) with openness to being changed, a willingness to learn, and a sense of responsibility for doing one’s best. ( Jay, 2003) 3/6/2023 17
  • 18. Cont’d • The term reflection may be used to refer to deliberate thinking about something that has already taken place. • A thinking process begins with a dilemma that suggests alternatives, and so thinking is evoked by confusion. • Reflection involves working toward a better understanding of the problem and ways of solving it. 3/6/2023 18
  • 20. Why We Reflect? Reflection can help us to feel more aware of and confident in ourselves generally, and in our teaching role. It can help us to:  Make the best use of the knowledge available.  Be conscious of our potential for bias & discrimination.  Challenge & develop the existing professional knowledge base  Maximize our own opportunities for learning.  Recognize what we do well so that we can apply these skills in other situations 3/6/2023 20
  • 21. Cont’d • Improve professional judgment • Learn from successes and mistakes to enhance development • Plan for future situations and therefore respond more positively to change • In general "Reflection leads to growth of the individual –  morally,  personally,  psychologically, and  emotionally, as well as cognitively". 3/6/2023 21
  • 22. Reflection can help us to: • better understand our strengths and weaknesses • identify and question our underlying values and beliefs • acknowledge and challenge possible assumptions on which we base our ideas, feelings and actions 3/6/2023 22
  • 23. Cont’d • recognize areas of potential bias or discrimination • acknowledge our fears, and • identify possible inadequacies or areas for improvement. • Learning Through Reflection We learn by experiences that allow us to – Absorb (read, hear, feel) – Do (activity) – Interact (socialize) 3/6/2023 23
  • 24. Activity • What is Reflective thinking? 3/6/2023 24
  • 25. What is Reflective thinking? • Theorists and researchers from different fields maintain different perspectives on the meaning of reflection; however, the notion usually refers to the foundation of higher-order thinking and learning. 3/6/2023 25
  • 26. Cont’d • Reflective thinking is a series of logical rational steps based on the scientific method of defining, analyzing, and solving a problem. • There must be resources that are already active in the mind, since we cannot force a brain to think out of nothing. 3/6/2023 26
  • 27. Cont’d • There is a natural resource that ‘activates’ the mind. • We may recapitulate by saying that the origin of thinking is some perplexity (lack of understanding), confusion, or doubt. 3/6/2023 27
  • 28. • Thinking is not a case of spontaneous combustion (the process of burrning); it does not occur just on “general principles." There is something specific which occasions and evokes it. 3/6/2023 28
  • 29. Cont’d • Critical thinking and reflective thinking are often used synonymously. • Critical thinking is used to describe "... the use of those cognitive skills or strategies that increase the probability of a desirable outcome... • thinking that is – purposeful, – reasoned and goal directed 3/6/2023 29
  • 30. Cont’d • the kind of thinking involved in – solving problems, – formulating inferences, – calculating likelihoods, and – making decisions when the thinker is using skills that are thoughtful and effective for the particular context and type of thinking task. 3/6/2023 30
  • 31. Cont’d • Critical thinking is sometimes called directed thinking because it focuses on a desired outcome. • Critical thinking, in general, refers to higher-order thinking that questions assumptions. Critical thinking is “thinking about thinking.” • It is a way of deciding whether a claim is true, false or sometimes true and sometimes false, or partly true and partly false. 3/6/2023 31
  • 32. Cont’d • The list of core critical thinking skills includes  observation,  interpretation,  analysis,  inference,  evaluation,  explanation, and  meta-cognition. 3/6/2023 32
  • 33. • Critical thinking employs not only logic but broad intellectual criteria such as  clarity,  credibility,  accuracy,  precision,  relevance,  depth,  breadth,  significance, and fairness. 3/6/2023 33
  • 34. Critical thinking calls for the ability to: • Recognize problems, to find workable means for meeting those problems • Understanding the importance of prioritization and order of precedence in problem solving • Gather pertinent(relevant) information • Recognize unstated assumptions and values • Comprehend and use language with accuracy, clarity, and discernment 3/6/2023 34
  • 35. Cont’d • Interpret data, to appraise evidence and evaluate arguments • Draw warranted conclusions and generalizations • Put to test the conclusions and generalizations at which one arrives • Reconstruct one’s patterns of beliefs on the basis of wider experience • Render accurate judgments about specific things and qualities in everyday life. 3/6/2023 35
  • 36. • “Reflective thinking is the process of creating and clarifying the meaning of experience (past or present) in terms of self (self in relation to self and self in relation to the world.)” • Reflective thinking is a part of the critical thinking process referring specifically to the processes of • analyzing, • evaluating, and • making judgments about what has happened. 3/6/2023 36
  • 37. Cont’d • Reflective thinking is an active, persistent, and careful consideration of a belief or supposed form of knowledge, of the grounds that support that knowledge, and the further conclusions to which that knowledge leads. 3/6/2023 37
  • 38. • Reflective thinking, on the other hand, is a part of the critical thinking process referring specifically to the processes of analyzing and making judgments about what has happened. • In summary, critical thinking involves a wide range of thinking skills leading toward desirable outcomes and reflective thinking focuses on the process of making judgments about what has happened. 3/6/2023 38
  • 39. Cont’d • Learners are aware of and control their learning by actively participating in reflective thinking – • assessing  what they know,  what they need to know, and  how they bridge that gap – during learning situations. 3/6/2023 39
  • 40. Good reflective thinking is a process where an individual: • Determines what information is needed for understanding the issue at hand • Accesses and gathers the available information. • Gathers the opinions of reliable sources in related fields • Synthesizes /produce/ the information and opinions 3/6/2023 40
  • 41. Cont’d • Considers the synthesis from all perspectives and frames of reference • Finally, creates some reasonable temporary meaning that maybe reconsidered and modified as one learns more relevant information and opinions. 3/6/2023 41
  • 43. General features of reflective thinking • Perplexity/puzzle, confusion, doubt. • The teacher has to provide a problem or scenario • Conjectural anticipation/guessing the reasons behind. • The teacher provides many opportunities to engage students in gathering information to look for possible causes and solutions. 3/6/2023 43
  • 44. • Careful survey (examination ,inspection, exploration, analysis) • The teacher will give activity sheets to help students evaluate the evidence they gather and questions that prompt them to consider alternatives and implications of their ideas 3/6/2023 44
  • 45. • Consequent elaboration of the tentative hypothesis/suggest solutions. • The teacher will prepare questions and activities that prompt students to draw conclusions from the evidence they gathered and pose solutions 3/6/2023 45
  • 46. • Taking one stand upon the projected hypothesis as a plan of action, • doing something overtly to bring about the anticipated result and thereby testing the hypothesis/ • evaluate and monitor the implementation of the solution. 3/6/2023 46
  • 47. • What is reflective practice? 3/6/2023 47
  • 48. • A ‘reflective practitioner’ is someone who, at regular intervals, looks back at the work they do, and • the work process, and considers how they can improve. • They ‘reflect’ on the work they have done. 3/6/2023 48
  • 49. • You need to learn from the experiences, and mistakes of others, you need to look at what you are doing and how others are doing the same thing; • can anything be improved? • Can anything be done better? 3/6/2023 49
  • 50. • Reflective practice • A process that helps teachers think about • what happened, • why it happened, and • what else could have been done • to reach their goals (Cruickshank & Applegate, 1981). 3/6/2023 50
  • 51. • Reflective practice is the ability to reflect on one's actions so as to engage in a process of continuous learning • Your engagement with reflective practice is an essential part of your success in your profession. 3/6/2023 51
  • 52. • Reflective practice can be an important tool in practice-based professional learning • settings where people learn from their own professional experiences, rather than from formal learning or knowledge transfer 3/6/2023 52
  • 53. • The practice of analyzing one’s  actions,  decisions, or  products by focusing on one’s process for achieving them (Killion&Todnem, 1991). 3/6/2023 53
  • 54. • Reflective practice can help you – as a new practitioner – • to identify how to review and improve your own teaching. • As an experienced practitioner, you may use reflective practice as an aid to lifelong learning and continuous improvement. 3/6/2023 54
  • 55. Cont’d • A practice for reflection can vary in terms of how often, • how much, and • why reflection gets done. • Reflective practice involves learning from experience. 3/6/2023 55
  • 56. Cont’d • It is important to remember that reflection is not the same as reflective practice. • Reflective practice is an extension of reflection: • while reflection may lead to thinking about an event in great detail and gaining new knowledge, 3/6/2023 56
  • 58. Process of reflection • Reflection engages in the process of carrying back and forth between thinking and action. • However, the process may appear differently in different situations. • One useful way to understand this complexity is to consider when it takes place. • There are two categories that simplify the concept: • Reflection-in-action (thinking on your feet) • Reflection-on-action (retrospective thinking//thinking back). 3/6/2023 58
  • 59. • Reflection-in-action is defined as the ability of professionals to ‘think what they are doing while they are doing it’. • It is the ability to think on your feet, and apply previous experience to new situations. 3/6/2023 59
  • 60. Cont’d • Reflection-on-action is a reflection after the event consciously undertaken, and often documented. • Reflection-on-action is defined as a process in which individuals reflect on actions and thoughts after they have taken place. 3/6/2023 60
  • 62. Cont’d • Reflective in action is that process that allows us to reshape what we are working on, while we are working on it. • It is that on-going experimentation that helps us find a viable solution. • In this, we do not use a “trial-and- error” method. • Rather, our actions are much more reasoned and purposeful than that. 3/6/2023 62
  • 63. Level of Reflection • There are three major levels of reflective practice .They are: • An initial level focused on teaching functions, actions or skills, generally considering teaching episodes 9one part of story) as isolated events. • A more advanced level considering the theory and rationale for current practice. 3/6/2023 63
  • 64. • A higher order • where teachers examine the ethical, social and political consequences of their teaching, grappling with the ultimate purposes of schooling. • to foster consistency between supported theory • (what they say they do and believe) and theory-in-use (what they actually do in the classroom). 3/6/2023 64
  • 65. • Technical Reflection • At the first level, teachers’ reflections focus on strategies and methods used to reach predetermined goals. • It is the lowest level of reflection. 3/6/2023 65
  • 66. • At the first level, teachers’ reflections focus on strategies and methods used to reach predetermined goals. • They are concerned with what works in the classroom to keep students quiet and to maintain order, rather than with any consideration of the value of such goals as ends in themselves. • It is the lowest level of reflection. 3/6/2023 66
  • 67. • Typical questions the teacher asks at the level of technical reflection are: • Did I spend too much time on group work today? • How can I keep students on-task? • Did I have enough (too many) activities? • How can I get students to pay better attention? 3/6/2023 67
  • 68. • Contextual Reflection • Teachers engaging in Contextual reflection attempt to understand the theoretical basis for classroom practice and to foster consistency between supported theory • (what they say they do and believe) and theory-in-use (what they actually do in the classroom). 3/6/2023 68
  • 69. • Teachers reflecting at this level can determine when there is conflict between what they practice and what they preach (e.g., seeing themselves as humanistic yet belittling students when they persist in disobeying rules). 3/6/2023 69
  • 70. • Typical questions the teacher asks at the level of pedagogical reflection are: • How can I improve learning for all my students? • How can I build in better accountability for cooperative learning tasks? • Am I giving my students the opportunity to develop decision-making skills? 3/6/2023 70
  • 71. • Critical Reflection • Critical reflectivity is interchangeably used as the dialectical level. • At this stage, teachers reflect on the moral and ethical implications and consequences of classroom practices on students. • Critical reflection is mostly considered as a higher- order level of reflection. It adds the following dimensions: 3/6/2023 71
  • 72. • Typical questions the teacher asks at the level of critical reflection are: • Do all students in my class have daily opportunities to be successful? • Who is being included and who is being excluded in this classroom practice? • How might the ways I group students affect individual student’s opportunity for success? • Does this classroom practice promote equity? • Do I have practices that differentially favor particular groups of students (e.g., males, females)? 3/6/2023 72
  • 74. • Case 1. • Zemen is very intellectual High school biology teacher. She believed that education has to equip students not only with theoretical knowledge but also the life skills that help them to survive outside of the school, as result, in most of her lesson, she manages to prepare examples and cases accordingly in order to aware students the current challenges like gender stereotypes and HIV/AID and their impacts. • 1. Which level of reflection Zemen has practiced? Why? 3/6/2023 74
  • 75. • Case 2. • Ayele is a teacher in primary school. After each of his class, he evaluates his and his students actual activities against his lesson plan to know whether he achieved them or not. Which of level of reflection Ayele has practice? Why? 3/6/2023 75
  • 76. • Discuss the benefits of reflection for teacher and students? 3/6/2023 76
  • 77. • The benefits of reflection for learners • Reflection helps learners to: • understand what they already know (individual). • Students improve their basic academic skills. • identify what they need to know in order to advance understanding of the subject (contextual). • Students develop a deeper understanding of subject matter 3/6/2023 77
  • 78. The benefits of reflection for teacher • Reflection enables a teacher to: • Make the best use of the knowledge available. • Avoid past mistakes. • solve a problem or address an issue in the classroom • Maximise our own opportunities for learning. • It can improve the quality of your work. • It helps you to plan for the future. • It helps you respond more positively to change. • You can learn from the experience of others. 3/6/2023 78
  • 79. Typology of reflection • Three dimensions of reflective thought: descriptive, comparative, and critical. I. Descriptive reflection • Descriptive reflection, the first dimension of reflection in our typology, involves the intellectual process of’ setting the problem;’’ that is, determining what it is that will become the matter for reflection. 3/6/2023 79
  • 80. Cont’d • Descriptive describe the matter for reflection – what is happening? – Is this working, and for whom? – For whom is it not working? – How do I know? – How am I feeling? – What am I pleased and/or concerned about? – What do I not understand? Fundamentally, description involves answering the question, ‘‘what’s happening?’’ 3/6/2023 80
  • 81. II. Comparative reflection • It involves thinking about the matter for reflection from a number of different frame or perspectives. • As compared to a technical approach to teaching, in which a teacher accepts a problem immediately and sets about trying to solve it, 3/6/2023 81
  • 82. III. Critical reflection • Critical reflection, the third dimension of reflection in our typology, describes the result of carefully considering a problem that has been set in light of multiple perspectives. • critical reflection is rather the constant returning to one’s own understanding of the problem at hand. • This is the process in which, one ‘‘may then find a way of integrating, or choosing among, the values at stake in the situation’’. 3/6/2023 82
  • 83. There are three types of nature of reflection. • Returning to experience • It refers to recollection / recalling of memory situations, events and activities that happened in the past. • description of what you did or plan to do (and why) • description of how you approached something or how it worked and how it did not. 3/6/2023 83
  • 84. Connections • Reflective connections are the most frequent source of influence on teachers’ practical decision making. • In these moments of reflection, teachers connect a particular aspect of their teaching experience with plans for instruction, moving from experience to reflection to action. • The teacher may back to his/her experience as student and ask questions to connect his past experience to his/her presence . • For instance: 3/6/2023 84
  • 85. • How do I want to be learned in high school the same subject I am teaching? • What was the feeling back there as a student? • Did you feel good or bad when you think of your experience as a student? Why? • Which teacher was my favorite? Why? • Am I teaching my students the same way that I loved to be learned as student? 3/6/2023 85
  • 86. Evaluation • It refers to evaluation of experiences and development of a teacher. • The subcategories of evaluation are: • giving an opinion • examining what you have learned. • drawing conclusions about your own development • evaluating your knowledge or functioning • investigating whether you have achieved your learning objective • examining what you found difficult and progressing 3/6/2023 86
  • 87. Reflection as thinking process • The domain of thinking Processes encompasses a range of cognitive, affective and meta cognitive knowledge, skills and behaviors. • It is organized in three dimensions: • Reasoning, processing and inquiry • Creativity • Reflection, evaluation and meta cognition. • Means (knowledge about own thinking: • knowledge of your own thoughts and • the factors that influence your thinking 3/6/2023 87
  • 88. Reasoning, processing and inquiry • The Reasoning, processing and inquiry • dimension encompasses the knowledge, skills and behaviours required to enable teacher students to find out the world around them, and to use critical thinking to analyse and evaluate information they encounter. • Students learn to assemble and question information and develop opinions based on informed judgments. • They also develop the capacity to transform information into coherent knowledge structures. 3/6/2023 88
  • 89. Creativity • The capacity to think creatively is a central component of being able to solve problems and be innovative. • In the Creativity dimension, teacher students learn to seek innovative alternatives and use their imagination to generate possibilities. • They learn to take risks with their thinking and make new connections. 3/6/2023 89
  • 90. Reflection, evaluation and meta cognition • Learning is enhanced when individuals develop the capacity to reflect on, and improve their existing ideas and beliefs. • In the Reflection, evaluation and meta cognition dimension, teacher students learn to reflect on what they know and develop awareness that there is more to know. • They learn to question their perspectives and those of others. • They evaluate the validity of their own and others’ ideas. • They also develop their meta cognitive skills in planning, monitoring and evaluating their own thinking processes and strategies. 3/6/2023 90
  • 91. Some strategies to help with daily reflection • Daily reflections have five major roles. • They:act as a record or diary of things that were done each day a. give program leaders and assistants feedback about the relative success of an activity is b. give participants an opportunity to practice their writing skills 3/6/2023 91
  • 92. C. give participants an opportunity to ask questions, seek clarity, express concerns: which activities did you like and why? which ones did you not like and why? do you have any questions about the activities? d. develop and increase meta cognitive awareness in participants 3/6/2023 92
  • 93. Some possible question that can be used during daily reflections are 1) What were my strengths/weaknesses? How have I improved? 2) What can I continue to work on? 3) How do I feel about my lesson? Why? 4) How effective was the pacing of my lesson? 5) How much of a chance did the students have to speak? 6) What did I notice in the class? 7) What would I do next time? 3/6/2023 93
  • 95. Reflective Teaching Different scholars define teaching in different ways. Some of the definitions are teaching is • “… an interaction process, primarily involving classroom talk, which takes place between teacher and students and occurs during certain definable activities” • “ … interpersonal activity directed towards learning by one or more persons “ 3/6/2023 95
  • 96. • Contemporary educators prefer to describe teaching based on the common attributes suggested by many authorities than defining it. Accordingly teaching is – An activity or action. You can see teaching take place; you need not (and. Some would argue, should not) infer it from learning. – A process. It involves a series of actions and decisions of the teacher 3/6/2023 96
  • 97. • An interpersonal activity and/or process. Interpersonal refers to the fact that teaching involves interactions between a teacher and one or more students. Most often the interactions are verbal and two-way. 3/6/2023 97
  • 98. Characteristics of A good teacher • From that consultation, and from other professional discussions in Ethiopia, the following profile of a Good Teacher is proposed: • Has a love of the profession • Has a wide and up-to-date subject knowledge • Maintains an attractive and supportive learning environment 3/6/2023 98
  • 99. • Creates a safe and ordered environment in which all students are able to learn • Plans effectively for student involvement and learning • Forms excellent working relationships with colleagues • Cares for the progress and wellbeing of students 3/6/2023 99
  • 100. Reflective teaching • Reflective teaching means – looking at what you do in the classroom, – thinking about why you do it, and – thinking about if it works - a process of self-observation and self-evaluation. • By collecting information about what goes on in our classroom, and by analyzing and evaluating this information, we identify and explore our own practices and underlying beliefs. 3/6/2023 100
  • 101. • This may then lead to changes and improvements in our teaching. • Reflective teaching is therefore a means of professional development which begins in our classroom. 3/6/2023 101
  • 102. characteristics of reflective practice 1 Reflective teaching implies an active concern with aims and consequences, as well as means and technical efficiency. 2 Reflective teaching is applied in a cyclical or spiraling process, in which teachers monitor, evaluate and revise their own practice continuously. 3/6/2023 102
  • 103. 3 Reflective teaching requires competence in methods of evidence - based classroom enquiry, to support the progressive development of higher standards of teaching. 4 Reflective teaching requires attitudes of open - mindedness, responsibility and wholeheartedness. 3/6/2023 103
  • 104. 5. Reflective teaching, professional learning and personal fulfilment are enhanced through collaboration and dialogue with colleagues . 6. Reflective Teaching enables teachers to creatively mediate externally developed frameworks for teaching and learning . 3/6/2023 104
  • 105. The Reflective Teacher • Each level of reflection is structured to parallel Bloom's taxonomy • Assume that a teacher looked back on a lesson (or project, unit, course, etc) they have just taught. • What sample questions might they ask themselves as they move from lower to higher order reflection? 3/6/2023 105
  • 106. • (Note: it does mean that all questions are asked after lesson - feel free to pick a few that work for you.) • Remember that each level can be used to support mastery of the new Common Core standards. 3/6/2023 106
  • 107. • Bloom's Remembering: What did I do? Teacher Reflection: What was the lesson? Did it address all the content? Was it completed on time? How did students "score" on the assessment? 3/6/2023 107
  • 108. • Bloom's Understanding: What was important about what I did? Did I meet my goals? • Teacher Reflection: – Can I explain the major components of the lesson? – Do I understand how they connect with the previous / next unit of study? – Where does this unit fit into the curriculum? – What instructional strategies were used? – Did I follow best practices and address the standards? 3/6/2023 108
  • 109. • Bloom's Application: When did I do this before? Where could I use this again? Teacher Reflection: Did I build on content, product or process from previous lessons? How does this lesson scaffold the learning for the next lesson? How could I adapt the instructional approach to another lesson? How could this lesson be modified for different learners? 3/6/2023 109
  • 110. • Bloom's Analysis: Do I see any patterns or relationships in what I did? Teacher Reflection: What background knowledge and skills did I assume students were bringing to the lesson? Were the instructional strategies I used the right ones for this assignment? Do I see any patterns in how I approached the lesson - such as pacing, grouping? Do I see patterns in my teaching style - for example do I comment after every student reply? What were the results of the approach I used - was it effective, or could I have eliminated or reorganized steps? 3/6/2023 110
  • 111. • Bloom's Evaluation: How well did I do? What worked? What do I need to improve? Teacher Reflection: What are we learning and is it important? Were my assumptions about student background knowledge and skills accurate? Were any elements of the lesson more effective than other elements? Did some aspects need improvement? Were the needs of all learners met? What levels of mastery did students reach? What have I learned about my strengths and my areas in need of improvement? How am I progressing as a teacher? 3/6/2023 111
  • 112. • Bloom's Creation: What should I do next? What's my plan / design? Teacher Reflection: How would I incorporate the best aspects of this lesson in the future? What changes would I make to correct areas in need of improvement? How can I best use my strengths to improve? What steps should I take or resources should I use to meet my challenges? Is there training or networking that would help me to meet my professional goals? What suggestions do I have for our leadership or my peers to improve our learning environment? 3/6/2023 112
  • 113. • Reflective teaching therefore implies a more systematic process of collecting, recording and analyzing our thoughts and observations, as well as those of our students, and then going on to making changes. • If a lesson went well we can describe it and think about why it was successful. 3/6/2023 113
  • 114. • If the students didn't understand a language point we introduced we need to think about what we did and why it may have been unclear. • If students are misbehaving - what were they doing, when and why? 3/6/2023 114
  • 115. Beginning the process of reflection • You may begin a process of reflection in response to a particular problem that has arisen with one or your classes, or simply as a way of finding out more about your teaching. • You may decide to focus on a particular class of students, for example how you deal with incidents of misbehavior or how you can encourage your students to speak more English in class. 3/6/2023 115
  • 116. • The first step is to gather information about what happens in the class. Here are some different ways of doing this. • Teacher diary This is the easiest way to begin a process of reflection since it is purely personal. After each lesson you write in a notebook about what happened. 3/6/2023 116
  • 117. • You may also describe your own reactions and feelings and those you observed on the part of the students. • You are likely to begin to pose questions about what you have observed. • Diary writing does require a certain discipline in taking the time to do it on a regular basis. 3/6/2023 117
  • 118. Peer observation • Invite a colleague to come into your class to collect information about your lesson. • This may be with a simple observation task or through note taking. • This will relate back to the area you have identified to reflect upon. • For example, you might ask your colleague to focus on which students contribute most in the lesson, what different patterns of interaction occur or how you deal with errors. 3/6/2023 118
  • 119. • Recording lessons Video or audio recordings of lessons can provide very useful information for reflection. You may do things in class you are not aware of or there may be things happening in the class that as the teacher you do not normally see. 3/6/2023 119
  • 120. • Video recordings can be useful in showing you aspects of your own behaviour. – Where do you stand? – Who do you speak to? – How do you come across to the students? 3/6/2023 120
  • 121. • Student feedback You can also ask your students what they think about what goes on in the classroom. • Their opinions and perceptions can add a different and valuable perspective. • This can be done with simple questionnaires or learning diaries for example. 3/6/2023 121
  • 122. • What to do next Once you have some information recorded about what goes on in your classroom, what do you do? 3/6/2023 122
  • 123. • Audio recordings can be useful for considering aspects of teacher talk. – How much do you talk? – What about? – Are instructions and explanations clear? – How much time do you allocate to student talk? – How do you respond to student talk? 3/6/2023 123
  • 124. • Think You may have noticed patterns occurring in your teaching through your observation. • You may also have noticed things that you were previously unaware of. • You may have been surprised by some of your students' feedback. You may already have ideas for changes to implement. 3/6/2023 124
  • 125. • Talk Just by talking about what you have discovered - to a supportive colleague or even a friend - you may be able to come up with some ideas for how to do things differently. – If you have colleagues who also wish to develop their teaching using reflection as a tool, you can meet to discuss issues. Discussion can be based around scenarios from your own classes. 3/6/2023 125
  • 126. • Using a list of statements about teaching beliefs (for example, pairwork is a valuable activity in the language class or lexis is more important than grammar) you can discuss which ones you agree or disagree with, and which ones are reflected in your own teaching giving evidence from your self- observation. 3/6/2023 126
  • 127. Read • You may decide that you need to find out more about a certain area. • There are plenty of websites for teachers of English now where you can find useful teaching ideas, or more academic articles. • There are also magazines for teachers where you can find articles on a wide range of topics. 3/6/2023 127
  • 128. • Or if you have access to a library or bookshop, there are plenty of books for English language teachers. Ask Pose questions to websites or magazines to get ideas from other teachers. Or if you have a local teachers' association or other opportunities for in-service training, ask for a session on an area that interests you. 3/6/2023 128
  • 129. Conclusion • Reflective teaching is a cyclical process, because once you start to implement changes, then the reflective and evaluative cycle begins again. – What are you doing? – Why are you doing it? – How effective is it? – How are the students responding? – How can you do it better? 3/6/2023 129
  • 130. • As a result of your reflection you may decide to do something in a different way, or you may just decide that what you are doing is the best way. And that is what professional development is all about. 3/6/2023 130
  • 131. How to become a Reflective Thinker? • Good reflective thinking is a process where an individual: – determines what information is needed for understanding the issue at hand – accesses and gathers the available information – gathers the opinions of reliable sources in related fields – synthesizes the information and opinions – considers the synthesis from all perspectives and frames of reference – finally, creates some plausible temporary meaning that may be reconsidered and modified as one learns more relevant information and opinions Cynthia Mazow: Learning, Design, and Technology Stamford University 3/6/2023 131
  • 132. Reflective Thinking Dimensions The most complete listing of reflective skills is found in Weast (1996) and were arragned and modified in a way to help us reflect: • Identify the reasons and the evidence – Identify the author's conclusion – Identify vague and ambiguous language – Identify value assumptions and value conflicts – Identify descriptive assumptions – Evaluate statistical reasoning – Evaluate sampling and measurements – Identify omitted information – Gathers available information of reliable sources • Evaluate logical reasoning – Synthesizes the information and opinions from all perspectives and fremes of reference • Makes appropriate judgements – Articulate one's own values in thoughtful, fair-minded way (objective, well balanced, and suffient complex) 3/6/2023 132