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Tips For Writing Reflective Logs

This document provides tips for writing a reflective learning log assignment. It explains that a reflective log critically assesses a student's learning experiences, progress, and reflections rather than just describing activities. To be truly reflective, students should ask themselves questions about what they achieved, skills developed, and how they can improve. Keeping a reflective log helps students become more questioning, tolerant, analytical, assertive, and self-aware learners. Most reflective logs are done through blogs or wikis. The document outlines good netiquette such as acknowledging others and being brief, and bad behaviors to avoid like flaming or trolling.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
1K views2 pages

Tips For Writing Reflective Logs

This document provides tips for writing a reflective learning log assignment. It explains that a reflective log critically assesses a student's learning experiences, progress, and reflections rather than just describing activities. To be truly reflective, students should ask themselves questions about what they achieved, skills developed, and how they can improve. Keeping a reflective log helps students become more questioning, tolerant, analytical, assertive, and self-aware learners. Most reflective logs are done through blogs or wikis. The document outlines good netiquette such as acknowledging others and being brief, and bad behaviors to avoid like flaming or trolling.

Uploaded by

jldcrz
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Tips for Writing a Reflective Learning Log for an Assignment

What is a reflective log?


This kind of log is a record of your learning experiences, thoughts, feelings and reflections. It is not just a diary of what you have done, but a critical assessment of how you have progressed. It is less formal than other kinds of assignments - for example you should write in the first person.

To be truly reflective you need to ask yourself some questions:


What have I achieved? Have I made progress? Have I developed new skills? How might I use these skills in the future (at university or in the workplace)? How have I changed my learning style? What would happen if I continued to practice this new skill?

Think about the last assignment you did....


Were you satisfied with the result? How could you improve the process of planning, research or writing? How could you improve your marks? What new things did you try? How did you overcome any difficulties?

The advantages of being a reflective learner


Students who successfully keep learning logs often notice changes associated with reflection

Accepting becomes questioning

Information for this handout and presentation was taken from: Pulman, A. (2009) Blogs wikis podcasts and more. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan

Intolerant becomes tolerant Murphy, S. (2011)Wiki etiquette for students [online] Available at: Doing becomes thinking http://education.pbworks.com/w/page/ Descriptive becomes analytical 18697893/Wiki%20%Etiquette%20%for%20students (accessed 21 Nov 2011). Impulsive becomes diplomatic Reserved becomes open Hull University (2011) Learning log or learning journals [online] Available at: www.hull.ac.uk/php/cesagh/documents/ Unassertive becomes assertive LEARNINGLOG.doc (accessed 21 Nov 2011). Unskilled communicators become skilled communicators Reactive becomes reflective Concrete thinkers become abstract thinkers Lacking self awareness become self aware (Miller, 1994 cited in Hull, 2011)

Most reflective logs are done through blogs or wikis


Blogs - Online journal/diary where posts are arranged chronologically Wikis - Group of web pages that lets users add and edit content. Posts are
organised by theme Good Netiquette
Acknowledge when someone else has made a good point Be positive in your criticism of others Be truthful Acknowledge if you have got information from somewhere else (plagiarism still applies) Be brief, to the point and logical Follow the instructions for the assignment Try not to get too emotional or upset about comments from other people

Bad Netiquette
Shouting writing in capitals can look aggressive Flaming a flame is an aggressive or controversial post that is designed to upset someone and provoke a response Trolling trolls are people who want to annoy and disrupt the discussion Scrolling this is when someone posts the same letter over and over again to fill up the discussion in an unproductive way

Remember always be civil when writing on Moodle blogs or wikis, try not to take any
criticism too personally but DO NOT reply to any offensive posts rather report your concerns to your tutor

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