reflective writing: an approach to developing critical thinking
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Reflective Writing: an Approach to Developing Critical Thinking & Proficient Writing
Nadine Ross
This paper was completed and submitted in partial fulfillment of the Master Teacher Program, a 2-year faculty professional development program conducted by the Center for Teaching Excellence, United States Military Academy, West Point, NY 2011. Abstract: This literature review endeavors to show how instructors can use reflective writing as a tool to help students improve their critical thinking skills and become more proficient writers. Reflective writing is a term that includes a variety of classroom writing activities ranging from semester-long journaling projects to short in-class writing exercises that ask students to summarize a lecture or discussion. Despite the variety of activities included under this umbrella, reflective writing activities have the potential to improve the quality of student writing by increasing the quality and quantity of student writing practice. “Writing—the art of communicating thoughts of the mind—is the great invention of the world…. Great, very great, in enabling us to converse with the dead, the absent, and the unborn, at all distances of time
and space, and great not only in its direct benefits, but its great help to all other inventions.”1
--Abraham Lincoln
The written word is a powerful tool, but few college students share Lincoln’s appreciation for
formal writing and its potential to have a profound effect on the world. In a time when social networking
sites and instant messaging have changed the manner in which people communicate in their public and
private lives, many college students have limited opportunities to practice the critical thinking skills that
are essential to effective, formal writing. This review endeavors to show how instructors can use
reflective writing as a tool to help students improve their critical thinking skills and become more
proficient writers.
Recent studies indicate that the decline in writing skills is a widespread problem in the American
education system. In fact, the National Commission on Writing in America’s Schools and Colleges
published a 2003 report that highlighted this crisis. Despite years of formal education, many graduates of
secondary schools lacked the ability to communicate effectively in writing.2
1 The National Commission on Writing in America’s Schools & Colleges, “The Neglected ‘R’: The Need
for a Writing Revolution,” The College Board, April 2003, 11.
According to the U.S.
http://www.collegeboard.com/prod_downloads/writingcom/neglectedr.pdf (accessed 29 Mar 2011). 2 Ibid., 16.
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Department of Education’s 1998 National Assessment of Education Progress as few as 22% of high
school seniors met the standards for “proficient” writing in that year’s assessment.3 The most recent
writing assessment conducted by the U.S. Department of Education in 2007 found that only 33% of high
school seniors achieved the Department’s standards for “proficient” writing.4
In their 2011 study, Academically Adrift: Limited Learning on College Campuses, Professors
Richard Arum and Josipa Roksa tracked over 2,300 students from a variety of colleges and universities in
the United States between fall 2005 and spring 2009. The results of this study indicated that 45% of
students participating in the study showed no significant improvement in critical thinking, complex
reasoning and communication skills after two years of undergraduate education and 36% of students did
not show any significant improvement after four years of college.
While the 11%
improvement in writing proficiency among high school seniors is noteworthy, this progress should not
overshadow the fact that there is still a great deal of work to be done to improve student writing in the
college classroom.
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If 67% of college freshmen begin their undergraduate studies without the analytical skills
necessary to communicate effectively, instructors at those institutions must create opportunities in the
classroom for students to learn and practice the skills that they are sorely missing. While there are
numerous approaches that instructors have used to address these deficiencies, some of those methods do
not appear to help students achieve writing proficiency. Reflective writing could assist faculty members
in addressing these challenges.
If this research is correct, then it is
time for instructors to consider new approaches to teaching writing skills in their courses.
3 U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, The NAEP 2007 Writing Report
Card for the Nation and the States, in The National Commission on Writing in America’s Schools & Colleges, “The Neglected ‘R’: The Need for a Writing Revolution,” The College Board, April 2003, 16. The NCES defined “proficient” writing as writing that was “precise, engaging and coherent.”
4 Debra Salahu-Din, Hilary Persky, and Jessica Miller, “The NAEP 2007 Writing Report Card for the Nation and the States,” U.S. Department of Education National Center for Education Statistics, 2007, http://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch/pubsinfo.asp?pubid=2008468 (accessed 29 Mar 2011).
5 Bob Herbert, “College the Easy Way,” The New York Times, 5 March 2011. www.nytimes.com/2011/03/05/opinion/05herbert.html (Accessed 29 March 2011) The students were assessed on their critical thinking, complex reasoning, and communication skills.
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Defining “Reflective Writing”
Reflective writing is a term that includes a variety of classroom writing activities ranging from
semester-long journaling projects to short in-class writing exercises that ask students to summarize a
lecture or discussion. Despite the variety of activities included under this umbrella, reflective writing
activities have the potential to improve the quality of student writing by increasing the quality and
quantity of student writing practice. Reflective writing can improve the quality of student writing by
encouraging students to move beyond describing events and listing facts.6 Instead, students analyze and
interpret facts in order to make sense of the information they have learned in class. It is through this
process of critical analysis that students are able to connect discrete pieces of information into meaningful
ideas that will be more easily recalled at a later date. According to John Dewey, the reflective thinking
process removes the burden of undigested information from students and allows students to work towards
a more meaningful understanding and comprehension of any given subject.7 By engaging with
information in a more critical manner, students must take ownership of the information and give it a
meaning for their lives as learners and future professionals.8
Additionally, instructors can use reflective
writing to address the issue of infrequent student writing by providing students with more opportunities to
practice explaining complex ideas using clear and concise language. Whether writing a daily journal
entry or short lecture summaries during each class session or once a week, students will have more quality
writing practice and teachers will have more opportunities to provide formal or informal feedback to
students regarding their comprehension of the material and ability to clearly communicate their ideas.
6 Martin Hampton, “Reflective Writing: A Basic Introduction,”
http://www.port.ac.uk/departments/studentsupport/ask/resources/handouts/writtenassignments/filetodownload,73259,en.pdf (accessed 5 Aug 2010).
7 Reginald D. Archambault, ed., John Dewey on Education: Selected Writings, (New York: Random House, 1964), 249. John Dewey was an educational philosopher who is often cited as one of the seminal theorists of reflective practice.
8 Delaura Hubbs and Charles F. Brand, “The Paper Mirror: Understanding Reflective Journaling,” Journal of Experiential Education, 28, no. 1, (2005): 61; Martin Hampton, “Reflective Writing: A Basic Introduction,” http://www.port.ac.uk/departments/studentsupport/ask/resources/handouts/writtenassignments/filetodownload,73259,en.pdf (accessed 5 Aug 2010).
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Recent Studies on the Value of Reflection in the Classroom
In the last two decades, educators have expressed a growing interest in the usefulness of reflective
writing as tool in the classroom. Many of those instructors used their curiosity about reflective writing to
develop research projects about its affects on learning, retention, and comprehension in a variety of
disciplines. In 1997, Martha Davis and Richard Hull conducted a study that investigated the effects of
requiring a group of students to write short summaries during brief pauses in a psychology lecture.
Although immediate post-lecture testing showed no significant difference in student performance,
students who wrote summaries during the four-minute lecture breaks performed better on the lecture post-
tests that occurred 12 days later. Davis and Hull attribute the summary writers’ improved retention to the
process of review, reorganization and synthesis that these students had to complete in order to write their
summaries.9 Three years later, a similar study conducted by Karen Hartlep and G. Alfred Forsyth
confirmed the valuable contribution that reflection made to learning and retention. Their examination of
study techniques found that reflection aided student retention of material.10 In studies, such as the Ash,
Clayton and Atkinson study of reflection in service-learning courses, students who participated in courses
requiring reflective writing showed a 48% increase in their ability to demonstrate analysis and evaluation
in their writing at the end of the course.11
Tips for Implementing Reflective Writing in your Classroom
Due to the growing interest in reflective writing, an increasing percentage of the literature on this
topic incorporates a variety of suggestions for implementing reflective writing in the classroom.
Additionally, several sources address faculty and student concerns about reflective writing as a classroom
activity. The suggestions that follow summarize the most frequently reflective writing tips based on
research and classroom experiences of college professors.
9 Martha Davis and Richard Hult, “effects of Writing Summaries as a Generative Learning Activity During
Note-taking,” Teaching Psychology, 24, no. 1 (1997): 47-48. 10 Karen L. Hartlep and G. Alfred Forsyth, “The Effect of Self-Reference on Learning and Retention,”
Teaching Psychology, 27, no. 4 (2000): 269-270. 11 Sarah Ash, Patti Clayton, and Maxine Atkinson, “Integrating Reflection and Assessment to Capture and
Improve Student Learning,” Michigan Journal of Community Service Learning 11, no. 2 (2005): 54.
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Give it purpose: Students may be skeptical of the value of this activity, but it is important that the
instructor help students understand the purpose of this activity in this course. If students understand how
these activities relate to the course, students will be more likely to approach reflection with an open mind.
Often this is as simple as explaining how the reflective activity connects to the goals and objectives of the
course. This connection should be explained prior to the first introduction of reflective activities in the
classroom and periodically reemphasized throughout the semester.12
Provide a starting point: Instructors can help students focus their thoughts during reflective writing by
providing students with a prompt based on the course material. A few example prompts are listed below:
- Do you think the Spanish American Wars of Independence were inevitable?
- Is the United States’ relationship with Cuba similar or different from the United States’
relationship with other countries in Central America and the Caribbean?
Prompts, such as these, are designed to encourage students focus on key lesson concepts and require
students to do more than simply list facts from the reading.13
Instead, they must analyze that information
and determine what they believe to be the best answer. In writing their answer, these students must
consider the best way to explain their argument and determine which facts best support their claim.
Set clear expectations: Education scholars and practitioners of reflective writing have a variety of views
on how to assess reflective writing, if at all. After determining what is best for you, your students, and
the course, it is essential that you communicate your expectations and grading standards to the students.
Regardless of your decision, your students should understand that these exercises require critical analysis
12 Dannelle Stevens and Joanne Cooper, Journal Keeping: How to Use Reflective Writing for Learning,
Teaching, Professional Insight and Positive Change, (Sterling: Stylus Publishing, 2009), 51. 13 Ibid., 103.
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not simply listing facts. As a result, instructor feedback should reflect the emphasis on analysis and
synthesis by focusing primarily on these areas in student reflections.14
Find efficiencies that save time: Some instructors argue that reflective writing is a valuable, but time
consuming task. This does not have to be the case. First, students can conduct reflective writing
activities in a five to fifteen minute time frame during class meetings. This ensures that students complete
reflective activities regardless of their busy schedules. Second, faculty can use a variety of techniques to
make the process of providing feedback more efficient. Instructors can choose to alter the frequency of
reflective writing activities (i.e. during each class or once a week) or alter the frequency of grading
student reflections (i.e. once a week).15 Additionally, grading reflections on a pass/fail basis or using a
rubric can make assessment more efficient and less stressful for the instructor.16
The written word is powerful. It is powerful because it has the ability to influence people, but it
also has the power to help writers think about information and ideas in new ways. By teaching students
to harness the power of the written word in professional and academic settings, instructors are helping
student become effective communicators and equipping them to think critically about the ideas they
encounter. If “the reward of disciplined writing is…a mind equipped to think,” then reflective writing is
In either case, it is
important that students receive instructor feedback on their progress and how they can improve their
analytical skills.
14 Delaura Hubbs and Charles F. Brand, “The Paper Mirror: Understanding Reflective Journaling,” Journal
of Experiential Education, 28, no. 1, (2005): 65. 15 John C. Bean, Engaging Ideas: The Professor’s Guide to Integrating Writing Critical Thinking, and
Active Learning in the Classroom, (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001), 99; Jacqueline Whitt, discussion, Aug 2010. 16 Timothy O’Connell and Janet Dyment, “Reflections on Using Journals in Higher Education: A Focus
Group Discussion with Faculty,” Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education, 31, no. 6 (2006): 683. One professor noted that pass-fail grading was “incredibly freeing.”
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one of the many tools that faculty should consider when they are looking for new ways to engage students
in critical thinking and improve student writing proficiency. 17
17 The National Commission on Writing in America’s Schools and Colleges, “The Neglected ‘R’: The Need
for a Writing Revolution,” April 2003, pg 11, http://www.collegeboard.com/prod_downloads/writingcom/neglectedr.pdf (accessed 29 Mar 2011).
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WORKS CITED
Archambault, Reginald D. ed. John Dewey on Education: Selected Writings. New York: Random House, 1964.
Ash, Sarah L., Patti H. Clayton, and Maxine P. Atkinson. “Integrating Reflection and Assessment to
Capture and improve Student Learning.” Michigan journal of Community Service Learning 11, no. 2 (2005): 49-60.
Bashook, Philip G., Mark H. Gelula, Medha Joshi, and Leslie Sandlow. “Impact of Student Reflective E-
Portfolio on Medical student Advisors.” Teaching and Learning in Medicine, 20, no 1 (2008): 26-30.
Bean, John C. Engaging Ideas: The Professor’s Guide to Integrating Writing Critical Thinking, and
Active Learning in the Classroom. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001. Davis, Martha and Richard Hult. “Effects of Writing Summaries as a Generative Learning Activity
During Note-taking.” Teaching Psychology, 24, no. 1 (1997): 47-49.
Harmelink, Kimberly. “Learning the Write Way.” The Science Teacher, 65, no. 1 (1998): xx-xx. Hampton, Martin. “Reflective Writing: A Basic Introduction,”
http://www.port.ac.uk/departments/studentsupport/ask/resources/handouts/writtenassignments/filetodownload,73259,en.pdf (accessed 5 Aug 2010).
Hartlep, Karen L. and G. Alfred Forsyth. “The Effect of Self-Reference on Learning and Retention.”
Teaching Psychology, 27, no. 4 (2000): 269-271. Herbert, Bob. “College the Easy Way.” The New York Times, 5 March 2011.
www.nytimes.com/2011/03/05/opinion/05herbert.html (accessed 29 March 2011). Hubbs, Delaura, and Charles F. Brand. “The Paper Mirror: Understanding Reflective Journaling.” Journal
of Experiential Education, 28, no. 1, (2005): 60-71. O’Connell, Timothy, and Janet Dyment. “Reflections on Using Journals in Higher Education: A Focus
Group Discussion with Faculty.” Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education 31, no. 6 (2006) 671-691.
Salahu-Din, Debra, Hilary Persky, and Jessica Miller. “The NAEP 2007 Writing Report Card for the
Nation and the States.” U.S. Department of Education National Center for Education Statistics, 2007. http://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch/pubsinfo.asp?pubid=2008468 (accessed 29 Mar 2011).
Stevens, Dannelle, and Joanne Cooper. Journal Keeping: How to Use Reflective Writing for Learning,
Teaching, Professional Insight and Positive Change. Sterling: Stylus Publishing, 2009. The National Commission on Writing in America’s Schools & Colleges, “The Neglected ‘R’: The Need
for a Writing Revolution,” The College Board, April 2003, 11. http://www.collegeboard.com/prod_downloads/writingcom/neglectedr.pdf (accessed 29 Mar 2011).
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SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
Bean, John C. Engaging Ideas: The Professor’s Guide to Integrating Writing Critical Thinking, and Active Learning in the Classroom. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001.
Engaging Ideas is a great starting point for faculty members who want to learn more about reflective writing and its integration into the classroom. This book includes a variety of suggestions for coaching students to become better writers and thinkers. More importantly, the first chapter provides an overview of the book to assist busy professors in finding the sections that deal directly with their area of interest of concern. Black, Rhonda, Thomas Sileo, and Mary Anne Prater. “Learning Journals, Self-Reflection and University
Students’ Changing Perceptions.” Action in Teacher Education 21, no. 4 (2000): 71-89. The authors examined 215 journal entries from educators and administrators in an elective course to study how students enrolled in their elective internalized the information they learned in a course about at-risk populations in schools. Their study found that the journal were an effective way to help students engage in critical thinking about complex issues, work towards finding solutions, and articulate them to others. Creme, Phyllis. “Should Student Journals Be Assessed?” Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education
30, no. 3 (2005) 287-296. In this article, Creme explores the issue of assessing reflective writing, particularly when dealing with student learning journals. Creme suggests that faculty incorporate peer reviews as a way to provide feedback to students without students feeling as though their thoughts are being “judged.” This is an interesting alternative or complement to instructor feedback and may be a worthwhile approach to consider. Hubbs, Delaura, and Charles F. Brand. “The Paper Mirror: Understanding Reflective Journaling.” Journal
of Experiential Education, 28, no. 1, (2005): 60-71. Hubbs and Brand view reflective writing as an effective way for educators to “see” their students’ “internal ‘making of meaning’” in writing. This article briefly explores the educational philosophies that contribute to the birth of reflective writing and provides brief ethical guidelines for instructional use of reflective journals. Additionally, the authors provide a content-process continuum, which is a useful way to visualize the critical thinking that reflective writing strives to help students achieve. O’Connell, Timothy, and Janet Dyment. “Reflections on Using Journals in Higher Education: A Focus
Group Discussion with Faculty.” Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education 31, no. 6 (2006) 671-691.
Based on a discussion between the authors and eight university faculty members, this article provides great insights into faculty experiences with using reflective journals in the classroom. One of the most intriguing parts of this article is the section in which the survey participants provide suggestions based on their experiences. Stevens, Dannelle, and Joanne Cooper. Journal Keeping: How to Use Reflective Writing for Learning,
Teaching, Professional Insight and Positive Change. Sterling: Stylus Publishing, 2009.
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This book provides a detailed explanation of the value of journal writing and how it can be used in the classroom and professional settings. The authors describe a variety of formats and include images from student and their personal journals to illustrate the variety of applications of journal writing. The book also includes 19 case studies (ten case studies deal directly with using journals in the classroom) that offer suggestions and lessons learned about this form of reflective writing. Taggart, Germaine, and Alfred Wilson, eds. Promoting Reflective Thinking in Teachers: 50 Action
Strategies. Thousand Oaks: Corwin Press, 2005. Although this book is focused on preparing teachers to be critical thinkers, it includes a number of activities and grading rubrics that can be adapted for any course or topic.