SarahJones
New member
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2026
- Messages
- 17
Reflection is important. We're supposed to "critically analyze our experiences" and "demonstrate personal growth." But every time I sit down to write one of these, I feel like I'm just writing a really boring journal entry.
"Today I did this. Then I felt that. I learned that communication is important. The end."
My professor writes "So what?" in the margins every single time. It's brutal but fair. How do you actually dig deeper without it sounding fake or forced? I feel like I'm just trying to guess what they want to hear.
I've heard about models like "Gibbs Reflective Cycle" or "What? So What? Now What?" but applying them feels so mechanical. Like I'm just filling in blanks. "Description: check. Feelings: check. Evaluation: check." It still ends up feeling lifeless.
Does anyone have a trick for making it flow naturally? How do you find that balance between being personal and being analytical? I want my reflection to actually show that I'm thinking critically about my practice, not just that I can follow a template.
I guess I'm asking: how do you make it real? How do you write about a mistake you made or a moment of doubt without it turning into a therapy session, but also without sounding like a robot?
"Today I did this. Then I felt that. I learned that communication is important. The end."
My professor writes "So what?" in the margins every single time. It's brutal but fair. How do you actually dig deeper without it sounding fake or forced? I feel like I'm just trying to guess what they want to hear.
I've heard about models like "Gibbs Reflective Cycle" or "What? So What? Now What?" but applying them feels so mechanical. Like I'm just filling in blanks. "Description: check. Feelings: check. Evaluation: check." It still ends up feeling lifeless.
Does anyone have a trick for making it flow naturally? How do you find that balance between being personal and being analytical? I want my reflection to actually show that I'm thinking critically about my practice, not just that I can follow a template.
I guess I'm asking: how do you make it real? How do you write about a mistake you made or a moment of doubt without it turning into a therapy session, but also without sounding like a robot?