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PREFACE

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Reflective practice matters. It matters because it opens a gateway for practitioners’ to learn and grow towards realising their potential and their visions of practice as a lived reality. A reflective practitioner is someone who lives reflection naturally within everyday practice. It is a mindful way to practice whereby the practitioner pays attention within the unfolding experience, mindful of responding most appropriately in tune with their vision. It is a process of self‐realisation. Rolling Thunder describes this as ‘seeking and knowing one’s own identity’ [Boyd 1974:7].

Reflective practitioners learn through reflection on experience. In this way, the practitioner gains insights that inform future experiences within a reflexively spiral of being and becoming. I assume that the practitioner’s practice matters to them and that values and vision are important. Hence realising one’s vision of practice as a lived reality must be the aim of every practitioner who takes themselves seriously. Recipients of service deserve nothing less.

The emphasis of this book is on becoming a reflective practitioner. Becoming is a journey. No matter the practitioner’s level of experience or status. It commences with the first reflection on experience. In the uncertainty and uniqueness of everyday practice, practitioners face situations that often feel chaotic. As Salzberg notes (2002:76)

No matter how much we want it to otherwise. The truth is that we are not in control of the unfolding of our experience. We can affect and influence and impact what happens, but we can’t wake up in the morning and decide what we will encounter and feel and be confronted by during the day.

The experience becomes less chaotic as the practitioner becomes more able to ride with chaos rather than be thrown by it. Such learning isn’t complex or difficult. Yet it does take commitment and discipline to learn in this way.

The spin‐offs are great. We become more effective, more purposeful, more motivated and satisfied, more in control of ourselves and our practice. Our lives become richer with meaning, purpose and expertise. We become more satisfied and committed. For these reasons, reflection has become a normal learning approach within the professional curriculum and, as such, demands serious consideration.

I wrote against a background of social unrest following the death of George Floyd in May 2020, and the resurgence of Black Lives Matter into the social consciousness as a consequence. His death is a wake‐up call for all people to be critically reflective of their own attitudes to ethnic minority peoples, most notably health care practitioners who espouse person‐centred nursing. Hence reflective practice matters as the key to enable practitioners towards cultural safety to become aware, examine, understand and shift their attitudes to ensure peoples of all races feel culturally safe. Becoming culturally safe that must be a key aspect of person‐centred practice. It is a massive challenge given the deeply embodied racism that most white people would deny and yet is reflected subconsciously in most aspects of daily life. Why is it that black people are ten times more likely to be stopped and searched than white people? [BBC News 8th July 2020].

The book is also set against an environmental background of climate change as a result of the way the planet has been exploited for economic growth. In response to the environmental crisis, there must be a radical shift in consciousness towards living in harmony with the planet resulting in healthier lives. Failure to do so will simply be extinction. Evidence is all about us. Take, for example, Covid 19. As such, practitioners, no matter what discipline, but perhaps especially health and social care practitioners, should reflect on their practice set against this background of creating healthier lives for themselves and for those they work with and care for. It is the bigger picture. It is our individual and collective responsibility to practice in harmony with the planet. It is a tough ask given the world we live in but, as Rolling Thunder (1974:7) notes –

mankind’s strength and ultimate survival depend not upon an ability to manipulate and control, but upon an ability to harmonize with nature as an integral part of the system of life.

My approach to ‘Becoming a Reflective Practitioner’ ever since the first edition published in 2000, is to create a reflective text to engage and dialogue with its readers. As such, I use many stories and dialogue to illuminate ideas and give examples of reflective writing. This approach illustrates the reflective process and what the writer seeks to realise in their practice. Hence, the text is also a text on realising person‐centred practice.

My inquiry into the nature of reflective practise commenced in 1989, resulting in an understanding of guided reflection (Johns 1998) that has been continuously reflected on for its rigor, coherence and utility as presented throughout this book.

The book is designed to guide both student and registered practitioners at any level of professional learning, along with their guides, teachers, and managers, to become reflective practitioners, not just clinical practitioners but also educators, managers, and most significantly, leaders able to enable others to grow and fulfil their potential. Although the book’s background is healthcare, it is a resource for all professionals who aspire to offer a service to people.

Health care, no matter what discipline, is fundamentally concerned with the relationship between the practitioner and the person receiving health care to meet the person’s health needs, whatever they may be. Nothing about this relationship can be assumed to be certain or predictable. Everything is an interpretation depending on context. As such, the practitioner’s response to the patient is perceptive, seeking to understand the patient’s experience and needs to inform an appropriate and effective response. This is the essence of person‐centred health care that is unless the patient is viewed as an object to do things to. Then the patient is no more than of technical interest. Disembodied. Education and practice must radically shift to ways of learning and knowing that nurture person‐centred health care rather than skid along the technical surface of things. We need to create opportunity to learn through experience to reveal the very depth of professional artistry. This is the way of reflective practice. And yet, if we are not alert, reflective practice too can skid along the surface of things. Most importantly, approach the book with a sense of play and curiosity to see where it takes you. Most of all, reflective practice is about YOU and nothing can be more interesting.

Like previous editions, this sixth edition has been extensively revised and reorganised to comprehensively guide students, practitioners, managers, and their guides across disciplines no matter their level of experience to learn through reflection on experience to become a reflective practitioner. I have looked back through previous editions and associated books (Johns 2002, Johns 2010, Johns and Freshwater 2005), reading and reflecting again on these published narratives resulting from my guidance of practitioners within the guided reflection. Some narratives are republished because they tell such vital stories of becoming a reflective practitioner. New guest authors give wider perspectives on reflective practice, including contributions from international authors.

Becoming a Reflective Practitioner

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