Reflective Writing
·
Reflective
Writing: writing as exploration and discovery, not as final thought
on established truths.
·
Successful reflective essays see connections between
personal experiences and implications to larger, general significance and
meaning.
·
Reflective Writing steps beyond autobiographical
writing, which narrates a meaningful experience.
·
Reflective essays use this experience to talk about
life in universal truths. Don’t just tell the story, don’t just tell why it’s
important to you, explain why it has meaning beyond your own pages as well.
(Avoid bumper-sticker clichés).
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Reflective Writing Analyzes a personal incident and
can discuss new dimensions of an original experience.
Take out
your “Now and Then” writings and discuss the following questions:
What did you end up writing about?
Is there somewhat of a theme in your writing?
Why do you think this was a topic
that you chose?
How does this writing sample have
meaning to you?
How might this writing sample have
meaning to others?
How might this writing sample talk
about life in universal terms?
Now that
you have a good recording of a meaningful person, place, or experience, revise
your writing on a new piece of paper by giving it the qualities of a reflective
essay discussed above. How can you take your experience and write about
universal truths?
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