Abstract

ABSTRACT Promoting reflection on experience and developing students’ reflective skills is an important element of curricula across the health professions. Students often do not find reflection easy and educators use a range of approaches to facilitate this. This qualitative study analysed final year medical students’ written reflections about important and difficult concepts they had encountered at medical school and personal change. As part of this, students were expected to look back on their written reflections from earlier years of the undergraduate programme. An initial analysis identified ‘learning from past reflections’ as an important theme. Here we report an in-depth analysis of this theme. Thirty-six final year volunteer students’ reflections were analysed and 6 themes identified where students explicitly referred to earlier written reflections. These were: managing emotions; holistic, patient-centred care; uncertainty and ambiguity; self-regulation; growth in identity and sense of self efficacy; and reflective practice changes. Asking students to reflect on past reflections appeared to help students identify personal change, and how their understanding of ‘important concepts’ and their views and approach to reflective practice have developed. Experienced by students as a motivating, profound, sometimes cathartic process, this activity could be a useful addition to reflective writing training in health professions.

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