As part of your self-development and learning, you will be expected to be reflective. It allows the mind to tackle a range of problems and situations.
Being reflective, in our everyday lives is something we do without thinking, such as, learning from your mistakes or errors. It just happens and we don’t normally follow a structured formula.
However, engaging in a more structured way of reflecting can enhance your learning and problem solving abilities. This enables you to process and adapt, become resilient, in your ways of thinking and learning.
Reflection can guide you in structuring your thoughts on everyday situations, your lectures, your classroom experiences, interactions with others, your assignments, and your research, in fact, in every aspect of your personal, academic and professional life.