Definition
Reflective practice in teaching is the disciplined, ongoing process of examining one's own instructional decisions, classroom experiences, and professional assumptions with the aim of improving future practice. A teacher using reflective practice does not simply ask "how did the lesson go?" after class. The question is more precise: What did students actually learn? What did I do that supported or hindered that learning? What would I change, and why?
The concept rests on a foundational distinction: the difference between routine action and reflective action. Routine action is driven by habit, tradition, and institutional expectations without critical scrutiny. Reflective action, as John Dewey (1933) defined it, involves "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." For teachers in India, this means treating one's own practice as something to be studied, not simply executed — whether you are teaching Class 6 Science using an NCERT textbook or preparing Class 12 students for board examinations.
This is not navel-gazing. Effective reflective practice is outward-facing: it uses classroom evidence, student work, and feedback to drive concrete changes. The practitioner returns to their teaching with sharper tools — not just a better sense of how the lesson felt.
Historical Context
John Dewey planted the intellectual roots of reflective practice in How We Think (1933), arguing that reflection was the cornerstone of professional judgement. Dewey described it as the active process of working through puzzlement — beginning with genuine uncertainty, moving through inquiry, and arriving at provisional resolution. His framing positioned teachers as thinkers, not technicians.
Donald Schön carried this forward decisively in The Reflective Practitioner (1983). Schön was dissatisfied with the dominant model of professional knowledge at the time, which assumed practitioners simply applied theories generated by universities and research institutions. He observed what experts actually did in complex, ambiguous situations and found something different: practitioners were generating knowledge in the act of practice itself. He named two modes of this process. Reflection-in-action is the real-time thinking that happens when a professional adjusts their approach mid-task — a teacher reading student expressions during a discussion and reframing a question on the spot. Reflection-on-action is the retrospective analysis after the event, stepping back to examine what happened and why.
Graham Gibbs extended this work in 1988 with a structured reflective cycle designed for professional education: description, feelings, evaluation, analysis, conclusion, action plan. Gibbs' cycle gave teachers a repeatable scaffold, and it remains one of the most widely used frameworks in teacher education programmes worldwide, including in Indian B.Ed. and D.El.Ed. courses.
Christopher Day (1999) and Andy Hargreaves (1994) subsequently situated reflective practice within the broader conditions of teaching, arguing that genuine reflection required time, trust, and collaborative culture — not just individual will. Their work moved the conversation from the individual teacher to the professional community, a shift that resonates strongly in the Indian context, where the National Education Policy 2020 explicitly calls for continuous professional development and collaborative school cultures.
Key Principles
Reflection Requires Evidence, Not Just Memory
Memory of a lesson is shaped by attention, emotion, and assumption. Effective reflective practice grounds itself in concrete evidence: student notebooks, class test results, observational notes, video recordings of lessons, or feedback from a HOD observation. Without evidence, reflection tends to confirm what teachers already believe rather than reveal what actually happened. The shift from "I think the group activity went well" to "eight of the twelve groups produced written summaries that addressed the central concept from Chapter 4" is the shift from impression to inquiry.
Both In-the-Moment and After-the-Fact Reflection Matter
Schön's distinction between reflection-in-action and reflection-on-action captures two genuinely different professional capacities. Reflection-in-action is fast, embedded in the flow of practice, and often tacit. Reflection-on-action is slower, more deliberate, and creates lasting change through explicit analysis. Competent teachers develop both. An over-reliance on after-the-fact reflection can leave in-the-moment missteps unaddressed; an over-reliance on intuitive adjustment without retrospective analysis can solidify unhelpful habits rather than revise them.
Critical Reflection Examines Assumptions
Surface-level reflection asks "what worked?" Deeper, critical reflection asks "why did I make that choice in the first place, and what assumptions was I relying on?" This is where reflective practice intersects with equity and identity. Teachers carry assumptions about student capacity, family background, and academic potential that are often invisible until actively surfaced — including assumptions linked to medium of instruction, socioeconomic background, or whether a student comes from a first-generation learner family. Stephen Brookfield (1995) argued that truly critical reflection requires examining the social, cultural, and political forces shaping classroom practice, not just the pedagogical ones. His four lenses framework invites teachers to view their practice through their own eyes, their students' eyes, colleagues' eyes, and the lens of theoretical literature.
Reflection Is a Habit, Not an Event
Professional development workshops that incorporate a single "reflection session" produce little lasting change. Reflective practice is effective when it becomes routine, integrated into daily lesson planning, weekly review, and term-level inquiry cycles. Research on habit formation suggests that attaching reflection to existing anchors — the last ten minutes of preparation time, the walk between classrooms, a consistent journaling routine at the end of the school day — is more reliable than treating it as a separate add-on.
Dialogue Deepens Individual Reflection
Reflection conducted in isolation is useful but limited. When teachers share observations, question each other's interpretations, and collaborate on analysis, they surface blind spots that solo reflection cannot reach. Professional learning communities create the structured conditions for this kind of collegial inquiry. In many Indian schools, subject department meetings and mentoring arrangements between senior and junior teachers already provide a natural forum — the question is whether these conversations are anchored in evidence and genuine inquiry, or remain informal and impressionistic.
Classroom Application
Daily Lesson Logs
The simplest and most sustainable form of reflective practice for classroom teachers is the brief lesson log. At the end of each period, the teacher spends five to ten minutes writing responses to three fixed prompts: What did students actually do and produce? What confused or surprised me? What will I change in the next lesson? The power of this practice comes from consistency and specificity. "The map-reading activity in Class 7 Social Science took twice as long as planned because students hadn't encountered the legend conventions in their NCERT Atlas" is infinitely more useful than "pacing was off."
Teachers who maintain lesson logs over a full term report that patterns become visible across weeks in ways that are otherwise invisible: a particular group of students consistently struggling with application-level questions in Class 10 Maths, certain chapters from the NCERT textbook generating strong discussion, or assessment items that produce uniform incorrect answers — signalling a shared conceptual gap rather than individual lapses.
Video Self-Observation
Teachers working on specific skills — questioning techniques, wait time, board work clarity, managing mixed-ability groups — find video review one of the highest-leverage reflection tools available. Recording a 20-minute segment of a lesson and watching it with a specific observational focus (how many closed vs. open questions did I ask? how long did I wait after posing a question before accepting answers?) produces data that memory alone cannot generate. The initial discomfort of watching oneself on video typically fades after two or three sessions. What remains is a level of observational precision that transforms subsequent practice. Many CBSE schools with CCTV infrastructure already have recordings available; with a colleague's agreement, these can be used purposefully for professional development.
Structured Peer Observation Cycles
Paired reflection — where two teachers observe each other's classes using a shared observation protocol and then debrief together — combines the depth of collegial dialogue with the immediacy of fresh classroom evidence. One effective structure: before the observation, the observed teacher names one specific area of focus. During the lesson, the observer collects factual, non-judgmental notes (what the teacher said, what students did, how long different activities lasted). The debrief begins with the observed teacher reflecting first, then the observer shares what they noticed against the agreed focus. This protocol keeps the conversation grounded in evidence and centred on the observed teacher's own inquiry. In Indian schools where formal observation is often high-stakes and evaluative, establishing a voluntary, collegial peer observation culture requires deliberate norm-setting from school leadership.
Research Evidence
John Hattie and Helen Timperley's (2007) landmark review of feedback research, published in Review of Educational Research, found that the most effective feedback — whether directed at students or teachers — is specific, connected to clear goals, and invites further action. This principle applies directly to reflective practice: reflection that produces a concrete next step generates more professional growth than reflection that ends with general self-evaluation.
A 2014 synthesis by Beauchamp, published in Teaching and Teacher Education, reviewed 60 studies on reflective practice in teacher professional development. Beauchamp found consistent evidence that structured reflective activities improved teachers' ability to articulate the reasoning behind their instructional choices — a capacity linked to greater adaptability when standard approaches failed. The review also noted that reflection paired with expert mentoring or peer dialogue produced larger effects than solitary journaling alone.
Korthagen and Kessels (1999) conducted a longitudinal study of pre-service teachers using the ALACT model (Action, Looking back, Awareness, Creating alternatives, Trial) at Utrecht University. Teachers trained in this structured reflective cycle demonstrated significantly higher lesson planning quality and student engagement ratings in their second year of teaching compared to control groups receiving traditional practicum supervision. The study pointed specifically to the "creating alternatives" phase as the mechanism: teachers who consistently generated multiple possible responses to classroom problems adapted more effectively in complex situations.
There is an important caveat in the research: reflection without adequate feedback or external perspective can entrench existing beliefs rather than revise them. Korthagen (2004) described this as "pseudo-reflection" — a process that feels like inquiry but actually confirms prior assumptions. This is why collegial structures and formalised protocols matter. The reflective loop must be genuinely open to disconfirmation.
Common Misconceptions
Reflection is simply thinking about teaching. Every teacher thinks about their lessons. Reflective practice is something more structured and more rigorous. It involves systematic observation, evidence collection, and deliberate analysis against explicit questions or frameworks. The difference between informal thinking and reflective practice is the difference between noticing and investigating. Schön's work was partly a response to this confusion — he was documenting a specific kind of professional reasoning, not endorsing general rumination.
More reflection is always better. Reflection can become ruminative rather than productive if it lacks direction or resolution. A teacher who replays a difficult lesson repeatedly without reaching any actionable conclusion is not practising reflection in the professional sense. Effective reflective practice has a built-in endpoint: a changed decision, a tested hypothesis, or a refined strategy. Frameworks like Gibbs' cycle build this closure in deliberately. Time constraints are real in Indian schools — with large class sizes, multiple sections, and administrative demands — and reflection should be bounded and purposeful rather than open-ended.
Reflective practice is a solo activity. The image of the solitary teacher writing in a journal is appealing but misleading. Research consistently shows that reflection conducted entirely in isolation produces shallower analysis and slower professional growth than reflection embedded in collaborative structures. The most effective professional development programmes use reflective practice as a vehicle for shared inquiry. In India, the National Education Policy 2020 vision of school complexes and professional learning networks points precisely in this direction.
Connection to Active Learning
Reflective practice for teachers is, at its core, a metacognitive activity: teachers thinking about their own thinking and actions. This places it in direct dialogue with metacognition — the same capacity researchers like John Flavell (1979) and Ann Brown (1987) identified as central to deep student learning. A teacher who practises reflection develops the same skills they are trying to cultivate in students — monitoring comprehension, evaluating strategies, revising approaches. Classrooms led by reflective teachers tend to make thinking visible more explicitly, because their teachers are practised at doing so themselves.
Action research formalises reflective practice into a structured inquiry cycle: identify a question, collect data, analyse findings, act on conclusions, repeat. For teachers who have developed strong reflective habits through journaling or peer observation, action research is the natural next step — moving from personal inquiry to systematic investigation. The NCERT and many State Councils of Educational Research and Training (SCERTs) actively encourage classroom-based action research as part of teacher professional development, making this a particularly relevant pathway for Indian educators.
Professional learning communities provide the collaborative infrastructure within which reflective practice achieves its greatest effects. When subject departments or school-level PLCs adopt shared protocols for examining student work, observing classrooms, and discussing instructional decisions, they transform individual reflection into collective professional learning. The norms of a well-functioning PLC — evidence-based discussion, inquiry stance, deprivatised practice — are the same norms that make individual reflection rigorous.
Active learning methodologies such as Socratic seminar and project-based learning generate rich material for teacher reflection precisely because they are complex and responsive. When students are discussing, collaborating, and producing work in real time — as envisioned in the NEP 2020's emphasis on competency-based and experiential learning — the teacher's role is more demanding and more observable than in direct instruction. The questions a teacher chooses, the moments they intervene, the ways they scaffold group work in a mixed-ability Class 9 classroom: all of these become visible and available for reflection in ways that a lecture-based format rarely allows. Teachers who adopt active learning methodologies report that reflective practice becomes simultaneously more necessary and more rewarding.
Sources
- Dewey, J. (1933). How We Think: A Restatement of the Relation of Reflective Thinking to the Educative Process. D.C. Heath.
- Schön, D. A. (1983). The Reflective Practitioner: How Professionals Think in Action. Basic Books.
- Brookfield, S. D. (1995). Becoming a Critically Reflective Teacher. Jossey-Bass.
- Korthagen, F. A. J., & Kessels, J. P. A. M. (1999). Linking theory and practice: Changing the pedagogy of teacher education. Educational Researcher, 28(4), 4–17.