Scaffolding reflective learning in clinical practice: a comparison of two types of reflective activities

Med Teach. 2014 Jul;36(7):602-7. doi: 10.3109/0142159X.2014.899686. Epub 2014 May 2.

Abstract

Background: The development of reflective learning skills is a continuous process that needs scaffolding. It can be described as a continuum, with the focus of reflection differing in granularity from recent, concrete activities to global competency development.

Aim: To explore learners' perceptions regarding the effects of two reflective writing activities designed to stimulate reflection at different degrees of granularity during clinical training.

Methods: Totally 142 respondents (students and recent graduates) completed a questionnaire. Quantitative and qualitative data were triangulated.

Results: Immediate reflection-on-action was perceived to be more valuable than delayed reflection-on-competency-development because it facilitated day-to-day improvement. Delayed reflection was perceived to facilitate overall self-assessment, self-confidence and continuous improvement, but this perception was mainly found among graduates. Detailed reflection immediately after a challenging learning experience and broad reflection on progress appeared to serve different learning goals and consequently require different arrangements regarding feedback and timing.

Conclusions: Granularity of focus has consequences for scaffolding reflective learning, with immediate reflection on concrete events and reflection on long-term progress requiring different approaches. Learners appeared to prefer immediate reflection-on-action.

MeSH terms

  • Belgium
  • Clinical Competence / standards*
  • Humans
  • Midwifery / education*
  • Problem-Based Learning / methods
  • Problem-Based Learning / standards*
  • Program Evaluation
  • Self-Assessment*
  • Students, Health Occupations / psychology*
  • Surveys and Questionnaires
  • Time Factors