intentional reflective practice

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INTENTIONAL REFLECTIVE PRACTICE Dr. Steve Mills and Jillian White DSA Professional Development Conference 1.20.12

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Intentional Reflective Practice. Dr. Steve Mills and Jillian White DSA Professional Development Conference1.20.12. Reflection. Process of deriving meaning from experience Engages participants in conscious, intentional, critical thinking for the examination of an experience - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Intentional Reflective Practice

INTENTIONAL REFLECTIVE PRACTICEDr. Steve Mills and Jillian WhiteDSA Professional Development Conference 1.20.12

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Reflection Process of deriving meaning from experience

Engages participants in conscious, intentional, critical thinking for the examination of an experience

Giving serious thought to something and connecting it to both past and future actions

Allows the participant to clearly develop his or her story about an experience

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Personal Patterns of Reflection

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Table DiscussionHow does reflection happen for you? Please discuss the why, what, and/or

when of your personal reflective practices.

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How Does It Happen for You? What works best for you?

Time – on the drive to work, before bed Place – coffee shop, nature Action – running, journaling, dancing Ritual – prayer, meditation, yoga Medium – journaling, creative arts, verbal Technology – social media (Twitter, FB),

blogging

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Kolb’s Process of Experiential Learning

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Kolb’s Process of Experiential Learning

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Why Reflect?The unexamined life…

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Why Reflect?

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Corresponding Truths Blind Spot direct result of useful feature

(blind spot as misused or overused strength) Blind Spot fills in based on previous

experience(blind spot as outlived habit)

Thank goodness for the other eye!

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Group Polarization EffectGroup discussion/interaction tends to drive groups toward a greater extreme in whatever direction they were already headed.(For example, conservative groups become more conservative, and liberal groups more liberal). Why? 1) Groups marinate in their own logical

arguments. 2) We seek distinctiveness in the direction

of group values.

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Groupthink: Clinging to a Mistaken View Concentrating on similarity, minimizing

difference…

Happens when groups: are fairly cohesive from the start have a strong, directive leader are isolated from others outside their dominant

perspective have a high self-esteem as a group Serious delusion may result! Devil’s advocates essential!

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Table Discussion What do Blind Spots and/or Group

Polarization suggest about reflective intention?

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Reflection

Action without reflection leads to burnout.

Reflection without action leads to cynicism.

Albert Einstein

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Reflective Practice What?

Facts and occurrences Objective reporting without judgment or

interpretation So what?

Looks at consequences of actions Shifts from descriptive to interpretive

Now what? Taking lessons learned and applying them

to future Big picture, goal setting, and long-range

planning

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Reflection as a Habit Regular practice Miss blind spots if you aren’t regularly

reflecting Chance to look at an event, program,

etc. holistically and piece by piece Discover what is present and meaningful

but not urgent Must explore the notion that reflection

may simply lead to frustration and/or despair

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Personal Reflection Plan What obstacles get in the way of your

reflection?

Can you name an area of your professional life currently suffering from a lack of reflection?

Is there a remedy?

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Reflection Resourcehttp://thecenter.fsu.edu/educated/reflection.handbook.pdf