2014 susan douglas - reflective practice in fdr practice : an empirical study

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Reflective practice in FDR practice: an empirical study Dr Susan Douglas LLB BSW (Hons) BA Grad Cert Ed University of the Sunshine Coast

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Page 1: 2014 Susan Douglas - Reflective practice in FDR practice : an empirical study

Reflective practice in FDR practice: an empirical study Dr Susan Douglas

LLB BSW (Hons) BA Grad Cert Ed University of the Sunshine Coast

Page 2: 2014 Susan Douglas - Reflective practice in FDR practice : an empirical study

Why investigate reflective practice for mediation?

Page 3: 2014 Susan Douglas - Reflective practice in FDR practice : an empirical study

Theoretical considerations

• Addressing issues of neutrality_independence Bagshaw D “Self-reflexivity and the Reflective Question: Broadening Perspectives in Mediation” (2005) The Arbitrator and Mediator 1.

Astor H, “Mediator Neutrality: Making Sense of Theory and Practice” (2007) 16 Social and Legal Studies 221. Mulcahy L, “The Possibilities and Desirability of Mediator Neutrality – Towards an Ethic of Partiality?” (2001) 10(4) Social and Legal Studies 505

• Questions of ethics and cultural considerations Armstrong S, “Developing Culturally Reflexive Practice in Family Dispute Resolution” (2011) 22 ADRJ 30. Hardy, S and Rundle, O, “Applying the inclusive model of ethical decision making to mediation” (2012) 19 JCULR 70

Macfarlane J, ‘Mediating Ethically: The limits of codes of conduct and the potential of a reflective practice model’ (2002) 40 Osgoode Hall Law Journal 49.

• Reflective and or reflexive practice: critical reflection?

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Practice considerations A tool for the improvement of practice and a way to learn by experience

• Boulle L, Mediation – Skills and Techniques, (2001 Butterworths Skills Series, Butterworths, Sydney).

• Winslade J & Monk G, Narrative Mediation: A New Approach to Conflict Resolution, (2000, Jossey-Bass, San Francisco).

• Brandon and Robertson, Conflict and Dispute Resolution, (2007, Oxford University Press.)

• Hardy S, “Teaching Mediation as Reflective Practice”, Negotiation Journal, (2009) 21(3) 385.

• Fisher and Brandon, Mediating with Families, (2012, Thomson Reuters). (reflective listening)

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Combining theory and practice

• Recognised (mandatory) professional competency in education, health and social care

• Practice wisdom_ the artistry of practice

• Argument for a standard of practice in mediation

• Key competency

• Meta-competency_‘the heart of key competencies’

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Reported limitations in practice • Literal and simplistic understanding and translation into

practice

• Simply ‘pausing for thought’

• Practices labeled as ‘reflection’ but demonstrating little evidence of analysis or understanding

• Theoretical discussions lacking intellectual rigour and sophistication

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Research question_objective

Research question

• What do mediators understand by ‘reflective/ reflexive practice’?

Research objective

• To understand what meaning mediators attribute to the concept/s and how they translate it into practice?

• To contribute to the development of a model/s for mediation practice (contributions for the audience sought)

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Research design: qualitative

Data selection

• FDR practitioner FRC and FMC Maroochydore under the auspice Uniting Community Care

Data collection

• Face-to face interviews 60-90 mins

• Semi-structured interviews Q’s in context of issues for practice

• Recorded/ transcribed

Data analysis

• Thematic analysis_ grounded theory approach

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Methodology

Social constructionism:

“All knowledge, and therefore all meaningful reality as such, is contingent upon human practices, being constructed in and out of interaction between human beings and their world, and developed and transmitted within an essentially social context” (Crotty, 1998, p. 42; emphasis in original). Crotty, M 1998. The Foundations of Social Research: Meaning and perspective in the research process, Allen and Unwin Pty Ltd, St Leonards, NSW.

Page 10: 2014 Susan Douglas - Reflective practice in FDR practice : an empirical study

The legacy of Schon (1983, 1987, 1992) • Asked the question: “How is professional knowing like and

unlike kinds of knowledge presented in a academic textbooks, scientific papers and learned journals? (Schon, 1983: viii)

• Explicit critique of technical rationality as a positivist epistemology of practice (1983: 31)

• Investigation of the ‘the mystique of practical competence’ (1983: vii)

Page 11: 2014 Susan Douglas - Reflective practice in FDR practice : an empirical study

Schon’s typology

Reflection-on-action

• Reviewing past actions with the opportunity of appraisal and evaluation in order to identify possible areas of improved performance

Reflection-in-action

• Use is made of direct feedback to influence and respond to a current situation; use of tacit knowledge: ‘thinking on our feet’

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Reflexive practice • Development in a research context

• “Reflexivity can simply be defined as an ability to recognize our own influence – and the influence of our social and cultural contexts on research, the type of knowledge we create, and the way we create it. In this sense, then, it is about factoring ourselves as players into the situations we practice.” (Fook & Askeland 2006: 45)

• Recognition of individual and disciplinary frames in professional practice (Schon 1983)

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Results: sample size and demographics • Six participants (pilot study)

• Drawn from FRC and FMS UnitingCare Maroochydore

• Three women and three men

• All with social science_counselling qualifications and experience as well as FDRP accreditation

• 1-7 years experience in mediation with average of 5 + years

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Results

Diversity in understanding

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Reflection-on-action

• Five of the six participants identified reflective practice in terms of reflection-on-action

• “Reflective practice is when we look back on something we have done and reflect on on what maybe we could have done differently or what we did well.”

• “For me being a reflective practitioner is about looking at my actions after the event.”

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• “Reflective I would suggest is examining something that occurred in the past and then looking at it from different viewpoints. Then I guess analysing the effectiveness of what we were doing at that time.”

• “Reflection … is looking at how you work with clients and being able to look after a mediation or even during a mediation – but after the mediation primarily – coming out and being able to look at you – think about how you work with that client; if there is anything you could have done differently.”

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Reflective or reflexive…

• The six participant seemed to use reflective and reflexive practice interchangeably, although made some distinction between internal and externalised contexts.

• “My understanding of reflexive practice is being able to identify what’s in front of you and you have to respond to that…”It’s reflective because you’re actually looking for what’s there now in the moment” (reflection-in-action).

• Example given: “..he didn’t appreciate my reflective practice because of my reflexive lack of awareness of his very hurt and emotional state”

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Reflexivity • Five of the six participants made some reference to reflexive

practice as ‘in the moment’ similar to reflection-in-action but with an acknowledgement of their own situatedness and personal response

• Attempts to make sense of ‘reflexive’ evident

• “When I’m thinking reflexively I’m thinking maybe more reactive.”

• “It sounds like it’s a reflex action. So for me it’s probably about what we’re doing in the moment”.

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• “ As a reflexive practitioner , for me, the word reflexive represents a different process (from reflection) which is where I reflect in action more than on action. When I’m in a reflexive practice, I might be in with a client and I’ll be looking at the immediacy of my interaction with the client and my responses to the client at the time. I might be looking at why I might be having those reactions or be thinking those things that I’m thinking. I might be thinking of the client in context and reflecting on their context that they’re in.”

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Emergent themes

• Learning from experience

• Accommodating flexibility and diversity

• The process of meaning making: narratives

• Dealing with uncertainty, messiness, complexity, uniqueness and value conflicts of practice

• Informed practice – combining a knowledge and value base … care, compassion …

• Self – awareness: considering the influence of assumptions, thoughts, feelings, values

• Addressing self care for practitioners

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Diversity of practice

• “There’s no model that we’re forced to use. Obviously there’s a process and the sticking within that process is an expectation of individual meetings. Then the joint mediation and going through with the statements and people being able to put forward proposals and able to work out – hopefully amicable – agreements. But there’s different ways of doing it. Sometimes for people you might use a facilitated model where you really just stick to that process. Other times, I guess, for myself I know I’ll probably use more of a therapeutic model quite a bit if I feel that’s appropriate for parents.”

Page 22: 2014 Susan Douglas - Reflective practice in FDR practice : an empirical study

Flexibility

• “My understanding of reflexive is just being really – I guess flexible during the process. So whether it’s during your initial meetings or during the mediation process, being able to make adjustments to the way that you work with people, language – the way you talk to them. The processes you use, being able to adjust that to accommodate the client.”

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Uncertainty

• “I find that if you try and plan a mediation ahead too much there’s always a curved ball; That it’s never going to go just as you think. [Reflective practice is] just being able to adjust the work but also coming out and thinking about how it went and how you might be able to make some adjustments in the future.”

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Self awareness • “Everybody has views, everybody has buttons, everybody has

processes. I think all we can hope for is to temper that the best way possible and that’s where the reflective and reflexive processes come in handy because it gives you a chance to have a look at what you’re doing and check in with yourself. Whereas reflective is about checking in with others as well, you know, more than checking in with yourself.”

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• “I imagine like any profession that deals with people, there are going to be personal issues that coincide with what you’re dealing with. I think after awhile what you tend to do is you’re able to park it and then you’re able to be professional and then deconstruct it when you need to.”

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Practical strategies

•Co-mediation models

•Debriefing

•Informal peer supervision

•Journaling

•Formal supervision

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Themes from a broader literature Extending Schon:

• Reflecting on the future (planning) (Wilson, 2008)

• Reflection-for-action: a process of planning and thinking ahead to draw on knowledge and experience (Thompson & Pascal, 2011)

• ‘On’ as focus, ‘in’ as ‘context’, and ‘for’ as purpose (Eraut, 1995)

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Models of reflective practice

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Collin,S & Karsenti, T “The collective dimension of reflective practice” (2011) RP 12(4) 569

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Fook and Gardner • Fook and Gardner (2007) model of critical reflection.

• A structured two stage process conducted over three sessions

• Introduction

• Presentation and reflection on a critical incident, deconstructing assumptions about what happened and why

• Reconstruction of the incident with new assumptions and strategies for the future.

• Masters in Social Work research project conducted by Jo Dunstan, University of the Sunshine Coast.

Fook J and Gardner F, Practicing critical reflection: A resource handbook (2007, London: Whiting & Birch)