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  • The idea of reflective practice is based upon the assumption that we learn from

  • our experiences, and that this contributes to our professional

  • knowledge. David Kolb's Theory of Experiential Learning provides a helpful

  • framework for understanding how reflection helps us make sense of our

  • experiences. As healthcare professionals, we are engaged in practical activities

  • with those in our care. Kolb refers to this as the concrete experience that

  • begins the cycle of experiential learning. During or after a concrete

  • experience, we often reflect on what we did, what went well and what didn't go so well.

  • This is referred to as reflective observation in Kolb's model and

  • highlights the importance of reflecting in and on action in order to learn from

  • experience. This reflection on experience often results in new ideas or

  • conceptualizations that shape our learning about practice. Through what

  • Kolb calls abstract conceptualization, we generate new understandings about

  • ourselves and our practices that inform the way we work. We then experiment by

  • trying out these new ideas or conceptualizations as part of the

  • learning process. Through what Kolb calls active experimentation, we test out the

  • implications and validity of our new understandings in the real world and

  • come to integrate new approaches into our practice repertoire. This cyclical

  • process of experiential learning is often repeated in order to see what

  • happens as a result of our adaptations. This process enables healthcare

  • professionals to think about the new experience,

  • reflect further, draw new conclusions and perhaps decide to adapt to one's practice again.

The idea of reflective practice is based upon the assumption that we learn from

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