Abstract

Reflectivity is an important professional competence of contemporary teachers. In order to explore how to encourage students’ reflection, we conducted a two-year action research project impelling them to become mutual critical friends. For critical friendship communication and other project activities, we utilised Moodle – an online learning management system. On the basis of the analysed data that were gathered at the end of each action research cycle, we determined that the students felt comfortable in the role of critical friends and that critical friends’ reflections were particularly pleasant for them. They experienced the comments of their critical friends as friendly, encouraging, useful, specific, interesting, detailed, positive, professional and clear. The majority of students (91%) think that the critical friendship discussion should be continued within the course Correlated-integrated systems in Croatian language teaching, and 85% of them suggest introducing this approach in other teachers’ education courses. We determined that the technical mode of reflective thinking prevails in the students’ correspondence. The practical or contextual level could rarely be observed while critical reflection was completely absent in 11 of 14 discussions. Reflective thinking of students (future teachers) should be fostered from the beginning of their studies within various courses, particularly in the pedagogical and methodological ones. To encourage their students to be critically reflective, university teachers should embrace reflective thinking by becoming critically-reflective practitioners and conducting action research in their teaching practices.

Highlights

  • Reflective thinking in education has its theoretical roots in Dewey’s seminal work How We Think

  • Articles that merely detect problems and plead for introducing critical thinking in teacher education cannot be of much help

  • Professors as ‘action researchers need to show their collective intent to live out the values which inform their work’ (McNiff & Whitehead, 2002, p. 25)

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Summary

Introduction

Reflective thinking in education has its theoretical roots in Dewey’s seminal work How We Think. He asserts that ‘active, persistent, and careful consideration of any belief or supposed form of knowledge in the light of the grounds that support it, and the further conclusions to which it tends, constitutes reflective thought’ According to Dewey, reflective thinking does not accept any thought or belief without questioning different options. There is no consensus regarding a distinction between critical and reflective thinking. Some hold critical thinking as a type of reflective thinking (Ennis, 1993), while others claim that critical thinking represents a higher level of reflective thinking (Phan, 2010)

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