RMIT_DIEP_strategy_accessible_2015 Study Tips: Reflective writing process 1 May 2015 WRITING AN ACADEMIC REFLECTION Reflective writing aims to help you focus on significant new insights you have...

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please check the reference style because am not sure about that one


RMIT_DIEP_strategy_accessible_2015 Study Tips: Reflective writing process 1 May 2015 WRITING AN ACADEMIC REFLECTION Reflective writing aims to help you focus on significant new insights you have gained through course work, practical placement (WIL), academic reading, etc. A reflective assignment may require a series of individual reflections, or focus on one. This outline presents an approach to writing a reflection, using the ‘DIEP’ strategy. * 1111.... CCCChhhhoooooooosssseeee ssssoooommmmeeeetttthhhhiiiinnnngggg ttttoooo rrrreeeefffflllleeeecccctttt oooonnnn • Identify an iiiinnnnssssiiiigggghhhhtttt (an interesting or illuminating new thing you learned) from reading, course work, studio, placement, etc. − Focus on something that may change your thinking (or be important for you) that you hadn’t realised. − Think about what the significance of this new insight might be for your learning and future practice. • Note any important details about the insight—where, when, who with, etc. If the insight came from reading, note all the important details of the idea, and include the author, publication, references, etc. 2222.... BBBBrrrraaaaiiiinnnnssssttttoooorrrrmmmm • Bring your ideas about this new insight together on one page to: − identify the significance of your new learning: question why it is important − detect connections between this idea and other ideas or material in the course or program − locate possible course material and other sources of information that support/explain your insight/s − give you the beginnings of a plan. • Write questions to answer or use a mind-map to clarify your thinking about your insights 3333.... PPPPllllaaaannnn aaaannnn iiiinnnniiiittttiiiiaaaallll ssssttttrrrruuuuccccttttuuuurrrreeee • Use the DIEP strategy (overleaf) to decide on your main points. Use headings to guide your planning. − Decide on your main insight. Plan a brief description of how this insight came about for the first paragraph. − Organise the body paragraphs. This is the interpretation and evaluation of the insight: draft possible topic sentences. Make connections with course work and other learning, and with the literature. − Draft some points for the final paragraph: indicate how this new learning will transfer to your future study and professional practice (and personal life?). 4444.... CCCCoooonnnndddduuuucccctttt yyyyoooouuuurrrr rrrreeeesssseeeeaaaarrrrcccchhhh • Look for academic material that connects with your new learning. Start with general reading, using course material, recommended texts, and books from the library. • Identify search terms from this reading to help you conduct a more refined search of academic databases. • You may need to research in areas outside your immediate discipline area, in addition to course material. 5555.... RRRReeeeffffiiiinnnneeee tttthhhheeee ssssttttrrrruuuuccccttttuuuurrrreeee aaaannnndddd ffffooooccccuuuussss yyyyoooouuuurrrr rrrreeeesssseeeeaaaarrrrcccchhhh • Use search terms from your earlier research to locate precise support/ academic detail (e.g. from journals). • Expand each point you want to make, focusing your research to expand on your main points. 6666.... WWWWrrrriiiitttteeee • Write using a detailed plan for each reflection: describe, interpret, evaluate and plan for future application. • Write the body paragraphs containing one main idea (interpreting and evaluating the insight) stated in the topic sentence. Other sentences explain, support and give detail, with evidence from research and/or examples. Integrate theory and include references as you go. Expect to write a number of drafts. 7777.... EEEEddddiiiitttt • Check that the reflection is focussed and specific, your points are relevant, and are linked to the insight. • Save additional copies of your submitted reflection in other locations e.g. RMIT H-drive, USB, laptop etc. Study Tips: Reflective writing process 2 May 2015 DIEP STRATEGY DIEP* is a strategy to help with writing a critical or academic reflection in four paragraphs. The four steps in this approach are to ddddeeeessssccccrrrriiiibbbbeeee an insight (new understanding), to iiiinnnntttteeeerrrrpppprrrreeeetttt and eeeevvvvaaaalllluuuuaaaatttteeee it, and to ppppllllaaaannnn how it might transfer to future practice or learning. First, select an experience or insight to reflect on. Then attempt to: • analyse your learning and deepening understanding • evaluate your gains in understanding and development, while acknowledging any complexities • integrate the concepts taught in courses (including references to the literature, where relevant) • focus on your developing confidence and cognition, and verbalise your feelings about your learning • make connections with theories in your course and/or program, and other relevant ideas/experiences • demonstrate transfer of learning to your study, practice, and to your future professional life. DDDD –––– DDDDeeeessssccccrrrriiiibbbbeeee oooobbbbjjjjeeeeccccttttiiiivvvveeeellllyyyy wwwwhhhhaaaatttt yyyyoooouuuu lllleeeeaaaarrrrnnnneeeedddd Choose a new insight. It might be something that you understand now (that you didn’t before). Focus on what you learned and give the details of what happened. Answer the question: ‘What did I learn?’ Some suggested ssssttttaaaarrrrttttiiiinnnngggg pppphhhhrrrraaaasssseeeessss: The most interesting (surprising/ important/ significant/ …) (insight/ theory/ thing …) I read (saw/ heard/ realised/ learned…) this week is that … One thing I realise (understand …) now is that … A significant issue I have not addressed in my previous writing is … Continue the paragraph with details of what, where, when, etc. IIII –––– IIIInnnntttteeeerrrrpppprrrreeeetttt tttthhhheeee iiiinnnnssssiiiigggghhhhtttt ((((iiiinnnn oooonnnneeee oooorrrr mmmmoooorrrreeee ppppaaaarrrraaaaggggrrrraaaapppphhhhssss)))) Explain the meaning of the new insight: your understanding/ hypotheses/ conclusions/ connections with other learning/ possible complexities/ questions unanswered/ etc. You can refer to ideas and theory in your course material, in research literature and from other sources to support your explanation of the insight/s. Answer the questions: ‘What might it mean?’ ‘How might this affect other perceptions, concepts, etc.?’ Some suggested ssssttttaaaarrrrttttiiiinnnngggg pppphhhhrrrraaaasssseeeessss: This realisation may have important relevance for three reasons. First, it implies … A possible implication/meaning of this new idea/understanding is that … This (new) understanding of … is likely to mean three things. It could be … EEEE –––– EEEEvvvvaaaalllluuuuaaaatttteeee wwwwhhhhaaaatttt yyyyoooouuuu hhhhaaaavvvveeee lllleeeeaaaarrrrnnnneeeedddd ((((iiiinnnn oooonnnneeee oooorrrr mmmmoooorrrreeee ppppaaaarrrraaaaggggrrrraaaapppphhhhssss)))) Make judgments about the value of what you have learned connected to observations you have made. Refer to theory from your courses and the literature here too, to show how your insight is connected to discipline knowledge and how your thinking has changed for the better. Answer the question: ‘How is this useful for my deeper understanding of the topic?’ Some suggested ssssttttaaaarrrrttttiiiinnnngggg pppphhhhrrrraaaasssseeeessss: This concept of … is valuable for …/ will change the way I approach … This understanding is important in a number of ways. First it … This insight is connected with (theoretical approaches to …/ theories/ concepts/ Having realised that …, I wonder if …/ I intend to develop … PPPP –––– PPPPllllaaaannnn hhhhoooowwww tttthhhhiiiissss lllleeeeaaaarrrrnnnniiiinnnngggg wwwwiiiillllllll bbbbeeee aaaapppppppplllliiiieeeedddd iiiinnnn pppprrrraaaaccccttttiiiicccceeee Comment on relevance to your course, program, future profession, life... Answer the question: ‘How might this learning apply in my future?’ Use future tense in this paragraph to show transfer of knowledge to the future. A suggested ssssttttaaaarrrrttttiiiinnnngggg pppphhhhrrrraaaasssseeee: This (new insight) will be useful in this course, in the (bachelor) degree, in my future career as a …, and in my life. In this course, (understanding …) could … *Adapted from: Boud, Keogh & Walker, 1985, Reflection: Turning Experience into Learning · ARCH1266 · Assignments · Assessment Task 2 - Reflection PGRD Semester 1 2019 (1910) · Home · Announcements · Syllabus · Modules · Discussions · Assignments · Grades · People · Echo360 Assessment Task 2 - Reflection Submit Assignment · Due Friday by 23:59   · Points 10   · Submitting a file upload The Assignment Brief  Due Date: Friday 19th April (Week 7)  Format: Individual work – reflective piece Word Length: 500 words Description: Through participating in the mini-conference and field trip you will be exposed to a range of concepts, issues and challenges, and ways of responding. For task 2 you are required to prepare a short piece of writing that enables you to consider your personal thoughts, experience, and learning, in relation to the material encountered (e.g. did you hear/ experience something that made you stop and think – what happened, what does it mean, what did you think about it, what might it indicate about sustainable water management, how might you deal it if you were in that situation). Further information on reflective writing is available via https://emedia.rmit.edu.au/learninglab/content/reflective-writing-1 (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. Assessment Criteria 1. Structure and scope (25%) Did the work include a clear aim that explained its intended purpose, and was the material presented in a logical way. 2. Effort and understanding (25%) Did the work demonstrate a familiarity with relevant concepts. 3. Originality (25%) Did the work show evidence of judgement and critical analysis of the material. Did the work critically reflect on the authors own knowledge and experience, and consider this in the wider context of learning about this field. 4. Written expression (20%) Was the work well expressed (i.e. was the writing fluent). Did it contain grammatical sentences and correct punctuation? Was the language suitably ‘academic’ in tone and content? Was the writing succinct and was the paper of an appropriate length? 5. Layout and referencing (5%) Did the work look professional? Were sources appropriately cited? Essential Readings https://emedia.rmit.edu.au/learninglab/content/reflective-writing-1 (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site. Submitting your assignment [You must submit your assignment by the due date. Feedback
Answered Same DayApr 17, 2021ARCH1266

Answer To: RMIT_DIEP_strategy_accessible_2015 Study Tips: Reflective writing process 1 May 2015 WRITING AN...

Akansha answered on Apr 18 2021
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Reflective Essay        1
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It is important to look at events that are related to nursing, as well as conferences, in order to gain more information about the subject and to improve the train of thought. The papers that are presented at the conference can help in becoming up to date with the latest research in the nursing field.
The following is a reflective piece that looks at my experience with 2 nursing conferences. One had been on dealing with patients who have gone through abuse, and new development in the field of abuse victims, and the other had been on improving bedside manners to deal with issues of diversity.
Reflection
The main aspects of the conference that had been interesting had been the international papers. All of these help in looking at how there are significant differences in bedside manners depending on the country. In many countries, there are laws that look at how the nurses can interact with patients who have undergone domestic violence (McGarry, 2017). In many other countries,...
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