Martin Hill |
Reflective
Practice – a phrase that you may have encountered numerous times as you conduct
your own coaching practice, but what does it actually mean?
Take a moment
to recollect the most successful coaching interventions that you have
conducted - what did the client do to make the success occur. I would suggest
that what the client did was reflect on the challenges and interventions in the
coaching session and then implement that learning, having adapted it to suit
their own style and goals.
Julie Hay in “Reflective
Practice & Supervision For Coaches” (2008) Open University Press- Coaching
In Practice series states
“Supervision is the process of helping you to step back from your work so that
you can take a meta-perspective or broader view of your practice….Reflective
Practice refers to the same concept as supervision but without the benefit of a
supervisor or colleague”
I use
reflective practice as a tool to make my own supervision more effective. Indeed
Hay makes the point “Prior analysis of your own practice saves supervision time
and enables supervisors to operate at a higher level when they support and
challenge you.”
Reflective
practice needs planning on your part in order to be effective and efficient.
One of the key tools that I use is ensuring that I capture my own learning and
reflections from a session as soon as possible after the session whilst still
fresh in my mind. In this age of technology there are a myriad of options –
using a smartphone voice recorder or dictaphone; making a selfie-video –
personally I prefer using a notepad. I initially simply record as much as I can
recall from the session in a “stream of consciousness” flow- not taking time to
reflect or review what I have captured at that stage. I then leave it for 20-30
minutes or overnight and then reflect on that as I write up my own coaching
journal notes. Try to focus on what you did; what you felt or what you thought
rather than capturing the content of the session. Watch out for making broad
statements which simply set out the outcome – drill down to examine and reflect
on what happened ; what you did - how the client and how you reacted; feelings
etc. What could you have done differently? What can you adapt or improve? What
made that particular tool/interaction unsuccessful? This provides a rich seam of learning to mine
to continuously improve your own practice.
When you
initially start off, the reality is that you will be reflecting on what you
have done in the PAST- the last session and previous sessions. Hay states “The
point of reflection is how to enhance capability so time spent reflecting on
how to behave in FUTURE situations allows you to identify more options and to plan for increased flexibility, with specific clients, and more generally.”
Martin Hill LL.B (Hons), FInstLM, FISQC, MAC, EMCC Member, Coach
&Coach Supervisor
Faculty Member
Programme Director for ILM 7 Coaching & Mentoring Courses
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