Get out your vanity, and turn on the lights. Gaze into your smart, academic face…
Stop! Not that kind of reflection!
When students reflect on their inner feelings and growth, that’s when the real learning happens. Reflection questions guide students in mapping their development and deepening their understanding.
Reflection is a tool for self-awareness, growth, and lifelong learning. Teaching reflection enhances students’ ability to absorb lessons. Reflection is an important metacognitive skill that will support students in their lives beyond academics. Emotional wellness, resilience, and critical thinking can all be developed when you invite students to reflect.
Here, we have provided some practical reflection questions, frameworks, and strategies to deepen student learning. Read on for frameworks and strategies, plus a list of great questions!
Student reflection helps students understand how they learn, not just what they learn. When students can metacognitively break down these processes, they can tap into deeper learning.
Allowing students space to reflect, especially on emotionally-prompted questions, can help them develop their capacity for empathy. Encouraging students to process emotions facilitates self-awareness. Staying in touch with their emotions can also foster resilience in students.
Asking students to reflect can help them develop their decision-making, problem-solving, and adaptability skills. When evaluating what went well and what could be improved, you can catalyze change in your students, building on past experiences and reflections.
The academic benefits of student reflection include stronger retention of material, better self-regulation for goal setting and planning, and overall better academic performance. Without reflecting on what has been learned, students have a harder time recalling and remembering important information when it’s needed, like on similar projects, experiments, or tests. Reflection questions for students are the key to long-term learning.
There are four essential frameworks to help strengthen students and best grow their reflective capabilities.
Here, we’ve categorized a multitude of different reflection questions for students. Within each of these categories, there is the possibility for backward, inward, forward, and checkpoint reflection.
For an easy entry point, give students the opportunity to develop a consistent habit of reflection.
For project-based activities, these questions can help students connect fun experiments (or Missions!) back to your lessons.
Reflection questions encourage students to form good habits. You could pair these questions with lessons on growth-mindset or perseverance.
If you struggle with disruptive behaviors, emotional reflection questions can help students self-regulate. These questions can help repair relationships and allow students to become emotionally strong.
Allowing students to set goals can inspire them to work harder. Reflecting on their progress will teach them accountability and time-management skills as they plan for future achievements.
A self-care routine is essential for academic success. These questions are especially helpful for secondary students.
Structuring reflection can help your students stay organized. Regardless of the medium, students will appreciate seeing the progress they’ve made, especially if you establish consistent, year-long reflection habits.
Reflection journals are a low-effort, high-reward route to prompt personal and academic improvement. Keeping a physical journal of daily or weekly reflections can be immensely gratifying for students to look back on throughout the year to appreciate how much they have learned and grown. The habit of physically writing in a journal can also help younger students work on their handwriting.
If you prefer digital media, and don’t want to deal with water-ruined, dog-eaten, lost-and-nameless reflection journals, there are many apps and websites available. Google Docs works as the perfect digital equivalent of a physical journal. Flipgrid allows students to record videos, which can double to help them work on public speaking. You might also introduce digital habit trackers to help students monitor personal habits like sleep and study time.
Creative reflection offers insights and a break from the typical day’s routine. Ask your students to draw a comic based on their setbacks and comebacks in the past week. Have them draw and label their own “rose-bud-thorn” reflection charts. Task them with writing a song about their strongest (or silliest!) emotions. For digital media, ask students to script, record, and edit a video, skit, or podcast.
Discussion-based reflections allow students to improve collaboration skills and gain insight alongside peers. Forming small groups, or even pairs, can encourage students not only to reflect but to learn from each other and have empathy for the growth and struggles of their peers.
Use sentence stems or open-ended questions to prompt deeper reflection. You could also try presenting sample responses or taking time to individually reflect with certain students.
Make reflection engaging and safe. Never share a reflection without their explicit permission, and respect all of their responses, even if they seem surface-level.
Use micro-reflections (1–2 minute prompts) as a transition between lessons or before the end of the day. Naturally slip in moments for reflection, and build the habit through brief but consistent check-ins.
Ensure all voices and perspectives are honored. Sometimes student reflections may become very critical, either of themselves, their peers, or even the teacher, and you have to allow them to feel like they have a safe space to reflect.
Click here to access our easy-to-print, downloadable Mission reflection worksheet for students! Or, access a list of guided post-Mission reflection questions here.
Reflection is a skill that will benefit students outside of school. You are shaping the way they learn. They will shape the future.
Make reflection part of your daily routines. Even micro-reflections at the end of every day have the power to radically transform not only what your students are learning, but how they are metacognitively thinking about learning. It’s a deeply gratifying life skill that will testify to both their learning and your proficiency.
Have your students already mastered reflection? Check out our article on the next step for your classroom: How to Incorporate Student-Led Learning Into Your Classroom.