The Role Of Reflection In Learning: It is a vital component to behavioral change
Bersin by Deloitte, 2016 Global Human Capital Trends
Today reflection is recognized as a vital component to behavioral change as it encourages the learner to assimilate the change, making it personal and relevant to their situation. Without this, the information is abstract and one dimensional, so it is easy to dismiss or ignore the directive. If the employee is supported and encouraged to apply that information to a real situation at work and can see how positively the interaction turns out, then they are much more likely to maintain the change.
Reinforcement, sustainability, embedding and transfer of learning are hot topics, and with an increased emphasis on business impact, the pressure is on trainers to make learning truly valuable beyond a traditional classroom learning environment. But what do these terms really mean? In reality each is seeking behavioural change as the end goal.
People must be supported with their behavioral adjustments after learning to allow their change to ‘stick’. As mentioned, at the heart of successful behavioral change is reflection.
Another industry report from Towards Maturity; “Transforming Formal Learning”, found reflection to play a critical role in the learning process, and, if used effectively and purposefully, can help embed concepts and theories from formal learning into practice. Learning from the Top Deck, we can see that of practitioners who are enhancing the application and transfer of learning into the workplace, 80% encourage and make time for reflection, and 45% encourage learners to keep reflective learning logs.
Stefano, Gino, Pisano & Staats (2014) also found that reflecting on learning and experience is in fact far more influential than learning from experience.
And that’s not all. A recent paper from Ruth Helyer (2015) found that when done well, reflection can facilitate ongoing learning and also provide a structure to make sense of learning so that it can be embedded into real change.
The evidence is overwhelming. Reflecting on learning experiences can be a powerful method of progressing learning goals. Any behavioral change solution to support learners should have reflection at its core. Without reflection, learning is wasted.
To make reflection truly effective, it needs to be paired with an accountability framework to maximise the results from change. We can’t force people to change, we can’t yell at them, plead with them, cajole or punish them to change. We can’t give them information and expect that they will automatically change work habits and processes that they have been using for years.
Source:
- Helyer, R. (2015). Learning Through Reflection: The Critical Role of Reflection in Work-Based Learning (WBL). Journal of Work-Applied Management, vol. 7, issue 1 (2015), pg. 15-27.
- Gino, F., & Staats, B. (2015). Why Organizations Don’t Learn. Harvard Business Review
- Stefano, G. D., Gino, F., Pisano, G. & Staats, B. (2014). Making Experience Count: The Role of Reflection in Individual Learning (June 14, 2016). Harvard Business School NOM Unit Working Paper No. 14-093; Harvard Business School Technology & Operations Mgt. Unit Working Paper No. 14-093. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2414478 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2414478
Author Bio
Emma Weber is CEO & Founder of Lever – Transfer of Learning and developer of the Turning Learning into Action™ (TLA) methodology. A recognized authority on the transfer of learning, Emma has been a guest speaker on learning effectiveness at conferences in Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia and the USA. She shares her passion and expertise through her writing - ‘Turning Learning into Action: a proven methodology for effective transfer of learning’ which was published in March 2014 by Kogan Page.
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