Background
Practicum reflection is central in PETE, yet prior studies rarely adopt a situated notion of reflection, resulting in repetitive findings. A situated perspective opens less explored domains by examining how reflections emerge within specific contexts.
Purpose and Research Questions
To complement existing research practices, this study foregrounds a situated approach by exploring how student teachers’ (STs’) school placements influence the structure and direction of their reflections. As argued elsewhere (Author, 2023), this perspective supports analysis that yields nuanced, context-sensitive descriptions without relying on predefined categories or privileging certain forms of reflection. The study was guided by two research questions:
- What meanings are constituted in STs’ reflections on their teaching?
- How do school cultures influence STs’ reflections on their teaching?
Theoretical Framework
The analysis draws on Wackerhausen’s (2009) four anatomical parts of reflection—on teaching, with resources, from teaching purposes, and within school cultures. Their combined configuration forms ‘reflection bodies’, which are interpreted through Dewey’s concepts of educative, non‑educative, and mis‑educative experiences to examine the directions of STs’ reflections.
Method
Video‑stimulated recall interviews generated qualitative data. STs in one independent and two public Swedish schools had their lessons video‑recorded, and selected clips prompted reflections on their use of Assessment for Learning (AfL). A three‑step, framework‑guided analysis examined the structure and direction of their reflections.
Results
Two reflection bodies emerged.
Grade-oriented body: Although some elements indicated educative potential, the overall structure narrowed STs’ focus to grade attainment, making reflections largely non‑educative or mis‑educative. The school’s culture reinforced an instrumental use of AfL, driven by pupils’ ‘grade hunting’ and teachers’ grade‑centered communication. Ambivalent reflections revealed internal tensions within this body.
The activity-oriented body exhibited limited educational intent. STs drew heavily on prior experiences, applied AfL superficially, and received insufficient support from the school’s teachers. Their reflections became fragmented and centered on physical activity rather than pedagogical purpose.
Conclusions
School cultures can promote a false sense of certainty about the right way to teach and reflect. The findings underscore the importance of productive uncertainty—an open‑ended stance that supports inquiry and iterative cycles of action and reflection.
Impact Statement
This study advances a situated notion of reflection in PETE by providing an analytical toolbox for examining how school cultures shape STs’ reflections. By focusing on reflection direction rather than essence, it offers a more nuanced understanding of educational value and highlights the crucial role of contextual environments in shaping reflective practice.