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Reflective Thinking: RT
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is RT | Characteristics | RT and middle school kids |
KaAMS and RT | Links
| Bibliography
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What is reflective thinking?
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
- 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. Critical thinking is sometimes called directed
thinking because it focuses on a desired outcome." Halpern (1996).
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.
Dewey (1933) suggests that 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. 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.
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.
However, reflective thinking is most important in prompting learning during complex problem-solving
situations because it provides students with an opportunity to step back and
think about how they actually solve problems and how a particular set of problem
solving strategies is appropriated for achieving their goal.
Characteristics of environments
and activities that prompt and support reflective thinking:
- Provide
enough wait-time for students to reflect when responding to inquiries.
- Provide emotionally supportive environments in the classroom encouraging
reevaluation of conclusions.
- Prompt
reviews of the learning situation, what is known, what is not yet known, and
what has been learned.
- Provide authentic tasks involving
ill-structured data to encourage reflective thinking during learning
activities.
- Prompt students' reflection by asking questions that seek reasons and evidence.
- Provide
some explanations to guide students' thought processes during explorations.
- Provide
a less-structured learning environment that prompts students to explore what they
think is important.
- Provide social-learning environments such as those inherent in peer-group
works and small group activities to allow students to see other points of
view.
- Provide
reflective journal to write down students' positions, give reasons to support
what they think, show awareness of opposing positions and the weaknesses of
their own positions.
- Links to descriptions of reflective thinking activities
in use with middle school kids:
- Recommendations for prompting reflective thinking in the classroom:
- Examples of lesson plans that have been revised to encourage reflective
thinking in students, e.g., prompting to compare what they know to what
they don't know and actively make modifications to their conceptions:
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Modern society is becoming more
complex, information is becoming available and changing more rapidly prompting
users to constantly rethink, switch directions, and change problem-solving
strategies. Thus, it is increasingly important to prompt reflective thinking
during learning to help learners develop strategies to apply new knowledge
to the complex situations in their day-to-day activities. Reflective
thinking helps learners develop higher-order thinking skills by prompting
learners to a) relate new knowledge to prior understanding, b) think in both
abstract and conceptual terms, c) apply specific strategies in novel tasks,
and d) understand their own thinking and learning strategies.
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Reflective thinking and middle school
kids:
- How to prompt reflection in middle school kids:
It is important to prompt reflective thinking in middle school
children to support them in their transition between childhood and adulthood.
During this time period adolescents experience major changes in intellectual,
emotional, social, and physical development. They begin to shape their own
thought processes and are at an ideal time to begin developing thinking, learning,
and metacognitive strategies. Therefore, reflective thinking provides middle
level students with the skills to mentally process learning experiences, identify
what they learned, modify their understanding based on new information and
experiences, and transfer their learning to other situations.
Scaffolding strategies should be incorporated into the learning environment
to help students develop their ability to reflect on their own learning. For
example,
- Teachers should model metacognitive and self-explanation strategies on
specific problems to help students build an integrated understanding of
the process of reflection.
- Study guides or advance organizer should be integrated into
classroom materials to prompt students to reflect on their learning.
- Questioning strategies should be used to prompt reflective
thinking, specifically getting students to respond to why, how, and
what specific decisions are made.
- Social learning environments should exist
that prompt collaborative work with peers, teachers, and experts.
- Learning experiences should be designed
to include advice from teachers and co-learners.
- Classroom activities should be relevant
to real-world situations and provide integrated experiences.
- Classroom experiences should involve enjoyable, concrete, and physical
learning activities whenever possible to ensure proper attention to the
unique cognitive, affective, and psychomotor domain development of middle
school students.
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How does KaAMS
support reflective thinking?
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When students are faced with a perplexing problem, reflective
thinking helps them to become more aware of their learning
progress, choose appropriate strategies to explore a problem,
and identify the ways to build the knowledge they need to
solve the problem. The KaAMS
model of PBL incorporates various components
to prompt students' reflective thinking during the learning
process. The lesson plans:
- Provide teacher questions designed to prompt students
to identify and clarify overall and subordinate problems.
- Provide many opportunities to engage students in gathering
information to look for possible causes and solutions.
- Provide ideas and activity sheets to help students evaluate
the evidence they gather.
- Provide questions that prompt students to consider alternatives
and implications of their ideas.
- Provide questions and activities that prompt students
to draw conclusions from the evidence they gathered and
pose solutions.
- Provide opportunities for students to choose and implement
the best alternative.
- Encourage students to monitor and reevaluate their results
and findings throughout the entire unit.
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Links to additional information on critical
and reflective thinking:
A Selected Reflective Thinking Bibliography:
Book:
- Moon, J. A. (1999). Reflection in learning and professional development:
Theory and practice. London: Kogan Page.
- Halpern, D. F. (1996). Thought and knowledge: an introduction to critical
thinking (3rd ed.). Mahwah, NJ: L. Erlbaum Associates.
Selected Article:
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Lin, X., Hmelo, C., Kinzer, C. K., & Secules, T. J (1999). Designing
technology to support reflection, Educational Technology Research &
Development, pp. 43-62.
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