lifelong learning and reflection Flashcards
(13 cards)
What are the four stages of Kolbs learning cycle? explain each stage
concrete experience: doing/having an experience
reflective observation: reviewing/reflecting on an experience
abstract conceptualisation: concluding/learning from the experience
active experimentation: planning/trying out what you have learnt
What is the priority matrix?
plot urgency against importance
explain what is meant by the term ‘metacognition’
metacognition- the process of thinking about how you think. it involves revising your learning strategies and re-evaluating them in order to study more effectively. it helps you to move to a higher level of learning.
discuss different learning strategies such as concept or mind maps
mind map vs concept map-similarities- both are visual representations of information. links can be drawn between different points to help give clarity and understanding to key ideas.
mind map:
- focus on one single idea.
- less structured, web of ideas
- relationships within that point are represented by lines.
- main point at the centre with branching ideas at the periphery.
- less flexible.
concept map-
- draws multiple ideas together. - relationships drawn with labelled arrows
- concept links are explained. can be cross links.
- hierarchal structure
-takes more time
discuss ‘imposters syndrome’ and explain why it is important to be aware of
imposters syndrome- the internal experience of not believing you are as competent as others perceive you to be
describes high achieving individuals who despite their success fail to internalise their accomplishments and have persistent self doubt and fear of being exposed as a fraud
believing you don’t belong, you got there by luck or accident and you feel like a fraud. common in high achieving individuals, they struggle to take credit for their achievements and fail to see flaws in those around them.
it can lead to burnout and impair performance, so recognising you have the condition can help you take steps to avoid this from happening. once you recognise this, talk to others you trust, with their help recognise your strengths, begin to build up a bank of things that if it comes back you can counter it with. give yourself credit where due, and accept that perfection is impossible.
what are the 5 types of imposter syndrome and explain them and how to manage them
- the perfectionist: slight errors considered a failure which leads to shame and guilt. Aim to do well (80:20 rule) rather than perfect, perfect doesn’t exist!
- the natural genius: expect to meet high goals quickly and effortlessly, they are ashamed when things get difficult. To manage appreciate lifelong learning and break tasks down into manageable chunks
- the superhero: success is based on how many different roles they can play, they feel like a fraud if they can’t play them all perfectly. To manage reframe failure as a learning opportunity and seek out an experienced mentor
- the expert: seeks to know everything, feel like a failure if they have lack of knowledge. T o manage mentor less experienced peers and enjoy the proc essential of not knowing and then finding the answer
- the soloist: needs to do things alone, without help from anyone, interprets needing help as a sign of weakness and failure. to manage, break the silence and talk to peers, family etc. seek tram work projects to practice relying on peers
What is reflection?
Looking back on a past experience, what it taught you and what you can change in the future
Two frameworks for reflection
What, so what, now what (Borton derived by Kolb)
Gibbs 6 step cycle (John Dewey)
Gibbs 6 step cycle
what happened? Describe the event
Consider your feelings
Evaluate experience- good and bad
Analyse situation
conclusion- What did you learn?
Action- What will you do next time?
what is Borton’s model that was derived form Kolbs model?
what?
so what?
now what?
why is reflective practice important?
-objective analysis of an event
- learn from past experiences
- aid future improvement and development
what are the roadblocks to learning?
- stress
- mental fatigue
- lack of self confidence
- lack of motivation
- negativity
- imposter syndrome
common errors in reflective writing?
- too informal
- too little/ too much detail
- poor organisation and structure
- inaccuracy/dishonesty