Packed with practical advice, this concise guide explains what reflective writing is and how to approach it. It equips students with all the key information and strategies they need to develop an appropriate reflective writing style, whatever their subject area. Annotated examples from a range of disciplines and contexts show students how to put these tips into practice. It concludes with a section on applying reflective practices to personal development and career planning.
This handy guide is an indispensable resource for students of all disciplines and levels, who are required to develop and demonstrate reflective qualities in their work. It will be particularly useful to students writing reflective logs on placements.
New to this Edition:
- Contains more content on the value and importance of reflection in other life contexts, so that students can appreciate its relevance from an early stage;
- Features a short overview of academic writing genres, to help students make connections between reflective writing and other forms of academic writing with which they are already familiar
- Covers alternative ways of capturing reflection, such as free-writing, blogs/vlogs and other technologies
- Includes new examples which show how students have re-worked their initial drafts to produce a better, more appropriate response
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Acknowledgements
Introduction
PART 1: UNDERSTANDING REFLECTIVE WRITING
1. About Reflection
2. Getting Started on Reflective Writing
3. Reflective and Critical Writing
4. Asking Strategic Questions
PART 2: LANGUAGE IN REFLECTIVE WRITING
5. Reflecting on Yourself and Your Experiences
6. Where am 'I' in Reflective Writing?
PART 3: FORMS AND CONTEXTS FOR REFLECTIVE WRITING
7. A Reflective Diary or Learning Journal
8. Learning Journals and Assessment
9. Portfolios
10. Reflection in the Research Process
PART 4: REFLECTION IN READING AND WRITING
11. Writing a Critical Review or Annotated Bibliography
12. Linking Theory and Practice
13. That 'Reflective' Quality in Writing
14. Getting the Balance Right
PART 5: USING FRAMEWORKS IN REFLECTIVE WRITING
15. Choosing a Framwork
16. Using a Framework for Reflection: Gibbs' Reflective Cycle
PART 6: REFLECTION FOR LIFE
17. Doing the Groundwork
18. Finding Your Evidence
19. Reflection as a Practitioner
Conclusion: The Habit of Reflection
References
Useful Sources
Index.
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Shows students what tutors look for in reflective writing, what reflection means in different contexts and how they can bring a reflective dimension to their work
For the time-pushed student, the Pocket Study Skills pack a lot of advice into a little book. Each guide focuses on a single crucial aspect of study giving you step-by-step guidance, handy tips and clear advice on how to approach the important areas which will continually be at the core of your studies.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781352010084
Publisert
2020-05-28
Utgave
2. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Bloomsbury Academic
Vekt
104 gr
Høyde
108 mm
Bredde
138 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
160