Reflective Practice is Housman Institute’s adaptation of Reflective Supervision. It is a process that focuses on self-reflection of one’s experiences, interactions, feelings, reactions, and areas of growth to promote emotional awareness, critical thinking, and problem-solving. Reflective Practice creates an environment that promotes self-reflection, empathy, understanding, support, and both personal and professional growth.
This comprehensive overview of Reflective Practice includes its definition, benefits, steps, strategies, and implementation tips, plus free downloadable resources.
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Reflective Practice is Housman Institute’s adaptation of Reflective Supervision. It is a process that focuses on promoting self-reflection, emotional awareness, critical thinking, and problem-solving to identify areas of growth, find more beneficial strategies, come to one’s own conclusion about a challenging experience, and meet professional goals. Reflective Practice creates an environment with reflection, empathy, understanding, support, and personal and professional growth at the center.
Reflective Supervision typically occurs in structured sessions between a trusted mentor, coach, or supervisor and a mentee, but the Reflective Practice process can also take place between any members of the community. This includes Directors, Principals, Mentors, Coaches, Lead Teachers, Teachers, Teaching Assistants, SLP, Counselors, children, and families. While more structured Reflective Practice sessions between a mentor and mentee should take place one-on-one in a safe environment, it can also take place less formally between other members of the community.
To find out more about how this may look, see The Power of Reflective Practice blog series:
➡️For Caregivers: Helping Caregivers Tap into Their Best SelvesReflective Practice plays a vital role in early childhood settings. It provides continuous professional development, support, and feedback for all members involved and gives staff a safe space to discuss challenging experiences and related feelings. It lays the groundwork for ongoing professional development through consistent self-reflection, community support, and emotional awareness.
Reflective Practice allows individuals to become more aware of their emotional triggers and learn how to effectively manage them with guidance from a trusted mentor. Children are emotional detectives who pick up on everything, including the verbal and non-verbal responses and reactions of the important adults in their world.
If we as children’s trusted caregivers do not have awareness of our own emotions, the skills to understand and manage them, or a means to actively practice self-reflection, we are unable to support children’s development of these same skills. Additionally, being an early childhood educator, while rewarding, comes with a great deal of stress. It’s critical that educators are able to manage the feelings that come with stress in order to support children’s development, communicate effectively with co-workers and families, and find job satisfaction.
Consistent self-reflection paves the way for emotional awareness and self-awareness. Whether it’s reflecting on children’s needs, the different communication preferences of families, or how you reacted in a disagreement with a co-worker, being aware of your tone of voice, facial expressions, body language, feelings, and reactions ensures that you are able to take a step back, manage your feelings in the heat of the moment, adjust your approach, and respond appropriately. Reflective Practice encourages early childhood educators to develop a deeper understanding of their own beliefs, biases, and values. By examining one’s own assumptions and reflecting on one’s actions and interactions, educators become better equipped to respond to the diverse needs of children, families, and co-workers.
Through reflection, educators can identify strengths and areas of growth that help improve their teaching practices. When we are able to take a step back and realize, “this isn’t working,” we end up giving ourselves space to consider what could work better. Whether it’s how we engage with children, how we support their emotions and behaviors, how we plan curriculum activities, how we communicate with families, or how we collaborate with co-workers, Reflective Practice allows us to refine our approach to better support children’s individual and developmental needs.
Reflective Practice helps educators use empathy and perspective-taking with others – reflecting not just on how we feel, but how others might feel as well to actively improve communication. It helps promote authentic relationships with children and families, and with co-workers. Tuning into the emotional responses of others helps us act with compassion and empathy during challenging conversations, creating respectful partnerships rather than confrontations.
Reflective Practice allows all educators to truly tap into their best selves personally and professionally, which strengthens the entire early childhood education community. Through continuous reflection, educators are able to enhance their emotionality, understand their reactions to stress, find better stress-management techniques, explore their communication and interactions with others, and identify their goals and areas of improvement. Through proactive problem-solving, educators expand their knowledge and skills, and find strategies to help them meet their goals. Reflective Practice ensures that all members in the community get the opportunity to explore how their work, role, actions, and words impact others – and how they, in turn, are impacted by their work.
Reflective Practice sessions have six key steps that follow the Gibbs Reflective Cycle. During sessions, mentors support mentees in self-reflection by asking open-ended questions to prompt critical thinking, and actively listening to mentees’ responses. The Reflective Practice steps can also be applied during daily routines with children, co-workers, families, or other members of the community.
The mentor prompts the mentee to describe a challenging experience or interaction by asking, “What happened?” and participating in active listening. This gives the mentee a safe space to reflect on the experience and describe the details of what happened in their own words.
The mentor prompts the mentee to connect the challenging experience to their feelings by asking, “What did that make you feel?” and continuing to actively listen. Connecting emotions to a cause not only helps mentees better understand their feelings but can also help bring light to any emotional triggers, which mentors can then support with managing and navigating.
The mentor guides the mentee to evaluate how the experience went by asking, “What went well? What didn’t? How did you contribute?” This is an important step, as it takes any judgment away from what happened and allows the mentee to examine their experience through a critical and empathetic lens. It also helps mentees explore how they contributed to an experience, both positively and negatively.
The mentor supports the mentee in understanding the meaning of the experience by asking, “Why do you think that went well? Why do you think that didn’t go as well?” and actively listening before providing their own insight. This step helps mentees explore why their contributions to certain parts of the challenging experience were successful or not, paving the way towards problem-solving and brainstorming more beneficial strategies.
The mentor supports the mentee in coming to a conclusion about the challenging experience based on their reflections by asking, “What could you have done differently?” This step helps mentees think critically and come to their own conclusion about what could have made the challenging experience more successful.
The mentor guides the mentee to think about what they would do differently by asking, “What will you do differently if a similar situation arises in the future? What support do you need to accomplish this?” This important final step ensures that mentees are able to follow through with their plan accountability and support.
Establishing a supportive culture within Reflective Practice settings is key to successful implementation. Leaders, administrators, and mentors play a pivotal role in fostering an environment that encourages open dialogue, respectful communication, diverse perspectives, and values continuous improvement.
Regular classroom observations can help mentors gain valuable insight into what teachers discuss during Reflective Practice sessions. Documenting observations and taking notes during and after sessions helps mentors follow up with action plans. It also helps mentors keep track of what different solutions have been implemented, allowing for adjustment and continued problem-solving.
Within Reflective Practice relationships, trust and consistency are key. Put a schedule in place for observations, regularly scheduled Reflective Practice sessions, and follow up. This helps mentors gain insight into what is happening in classrooms in order to provide the appropriate support. Not every solution is found right away! Regular Reflective Practice sessions create an environment where all individuals gain confidence in the act of self-reflecting, and the relationship becomes one of trust where individuals feel comfortable speaking openly and freely in mutual pursuit of a solution. It also helps staff feel reassured that they have a dedicated time to address challenges and seek support from their trusted mentor.
Opening up and revealing one’s challenges and emotions can make us feel vulnerable. This makes the mentor’s job all the more valuable and important. Not all sessions will feel positive and uplifting. Reflective Practice can bring up difficult conversations, such as concerns about a child’s behavior, uncomfortable interactions with parents or co-workers, and stressful situations. Mentors need to be active and thoughtful listeners who are understanding, accepting, and non-judgmental. Creating and maintaining an open and honest relationship is key to Reflective Practice. When this partnership is established and worked on, all members gain comfort in speaking openly without fear of judgment.
It is important for mentors to be aware of how mentees prefer to communicate, take in new information, respond, react, and problem-solve so you can adjust your approach, language, tone, and techniques to provide the best level of support. Reflective Practice requires using open-ended questions and statements to prompt self-reflection, but for some this may mean providing more context, guidance, and modeling. Adjust your approach to help scaffold the reflection process by using more specific questions or bringing up observations in a sensitive way. This ensures that all individual needs are met in order to see beneficial outcomes.
Reflective Practice doesn’t just need to take place one-on-one! It can also be the perfect setting for co-teachers or coworkers to reflect together. Collaborative reflection involves coming together to discuss and analyze their teaching practices, discuss challenges, share ideas and solutions, and engage in team-reflection.
Offering professional development opportunities and training focused on Reflective Practice equips early childhood educators with the necessary knowledge and skills to effectively implement the process and see benefits community-wide. Providing guidance on different reflective strategies and offering resources helps enhance educators’ ability to engage in Reflective Practice.
Reflective Practice should be integrated into early childhood education training programs, especially those focused on mental health, well-being, and social-emotional health. When training programs place self-reflection, self-awareness, communication, problem-solving, and professional growth at the center, educators are set up for support and success.
When Reflective Practice is incorporated into programs with mentoring and coaching, it provides valuable support for educators. Experienced mentors and coaches can guide and support teachers through the Reflective Practice process, offering feedback, encouragement, and guidance for professional growth.
Engaging in professional networks, online communities, or attending conferences based in Reflective Practice and collaboration can expand educators’ perspectives and expose them to different approaches to Reflective Practice. Collaborating with colleagues from different settings and backgrounds encourages the exchange of experiences, ideas, and opinions, which can help provide insight and strategies that can be implemented into your teaching practices.
Related: Learn more about the begin to ECSEL Professional Development Program
Reflective Practice helps educators tailor their teaching approach to meet each child's individual needs and interests. By working to enhance one’s own emotionality, learn stress-management strategies, and find solutions from self-reflecting, educators become more self-aware and more attuned to children. This allows educators to observe the responses of children and reflect on their needs, helping with making informed decisions about adjusting teaching, materials, and learning experiences to optimize learning outcomes for all children.
Reflective Practice can also help educators find effective ways to manage children’s behaviors and support their understanding of emotions, what caused them, and related behaviors. By analyzing challenging situations, educators can explore the underlying factors and identify proactive strategies to support children’s social-emotional development. By using Reflective Practice strategies in developmentally appropriate ways, educators can support children in explaining why a behavior isn’t okay before providing an example of something that they can do instead. This helps children understand the impact of their behaviors on others, constructively express their emotions, and gain confidence with the knowledge that all emotions are okay, but it’s what we do with them that matters most.
Reflective Practice helps educators develop critical emotional competencies themselves first so they can foster these same skills in children – the skills of emotional intelligence. By self-reflecting, educators learn how to practice effective emotional identification, understanding, expression, and regulation in order to model for and guide children in these strategies. Reflecting on one’s own interactions, responses, and reactions to challenging classroom experiences also helps educators adjust their approach to model empathy, prosocial behaviors, inclusion, self-regulation, communication, and relationship skills that children internalize and make their own. This promotes children’s healthy social-emotional development, mental health, well-being, and learning.
The dysregulated brain cannot learn. When children (and adults) are dealing with an unmanaged emotion, it hijacks the brain’s ability to listen, think, focus, learn new information – key executive function skills necessary for learning. Through regular implementation of Reflective Practice and Emotional, Cognitive, and Social Early Learning (ECSEL) language, tools, and techniques, children between the ages of 0-8 learn to manage their emotions so they can learn, succeed, and thrive emotionally, cognitively, and socially.
Books, journals, and research articles provide valuable information about Reflective Practice and its connection to social-emotional learning and Emotional, Cognitive, and Social Early Learning (ECSEL).
Online communities and forums dedicated to early childhood education help educators connect, share their experiences, collaborate, and engage in reflective conversations. Platforms such as social media groups, blogs, and discussion forums connect educators worldwide. In Housman Institute’s flagship begin to ECSEL Educator Training Program, all staff enrolled are invited to an online community focused on promoting self-reflection, Reflective Practice, and emotional intelligence.
Joining professional organizations and attending conferences or webinars focused on Reflective Practice connects early childhood educators to resources, workshops, and networking with others pursuing a mutual goal. Learn more about upcoming learning opportunities here.
Reflective Practice is a powerful approach that empowers early childhood educators to continuously improve their teaching practices and meet their personal and professional goals. By engaging in self-reflection, educators develop a deeper understanding of their own feelings, beliefs, values, and biases, leading to increased self-awareness, emotional intelligence, job satisfaction, and well-being. Implementing Reflective Practice in early childhood settings creates a culture of collaboration and continuous improvement, contributing to high-quality learning experiences for children and positive outcomes for the entire community.
About the Main Contributor: Emily Stone's experience with begin to ECSEL started at Housman Institute’s lab school where she was a preschool and pre-k teacher. During her time teaching, Emily underwent extensive ECSEL training and specialized in developing curricula with children’s social-emotional health at the heart of each lesson. Soon after, she became the Program Manager, where she used Reflective Practice to train and support teachers in their curriculum development and use of ECSEL language, tools, and techniques. Currently, Emily is the Manager of Curriculum and Coaching, where she oversees all written content for Housman Institute's programs, supervises the live implementation of the begin to ECSEL Educator Training Program in schools, and coaches school directors and administrators enrolled in the program.
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