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King & Kitchener’sReflective Judgment ModelPresented by:Ashley AselBuddy HousmanAndy MerrillNicole Staskal-Brecht
October 22, 2007
Agenda
•Learning Objectives•Write, Pair, & Share•Research•Outcomes and Factors•Utility•Criticisms•Application activity•Discussion/Questions•Evaluations
Learning Objectives
As a result of our presentation, students will be able to:
• Identify how it has been tested• Identify the major outcomes and factors
contributing to those outcomes• Identify criticisms of the RJM• Apply the RJM to student learning in their
assistantships or future work• Synthesize the usefulness of the RJM for
student affairs work through strategy development
Think, Pair, & Share
•Take a few minutes to write about a time in your own work when you have wanted to or tried to further a student’s reflective judgment .▫What made you think the student was in an
early stage of the reflective judgment model?▫How did or would you try to create an
environment in which the student could move to the next stage?
•Pair & Share
Research on the Reflective Judgment Model•Instruments
▫Reflective Judgment Interview (RJI) Standard probe questions:
What do you think about these statements? How did you come to hold that point of view? On what do you base that point of view? Can you ever know for sure that your position on this issue is
correct? How or why not? When two people differ about matters such as this, is it the case
that one opinion is right and one is wrong? How is it possible that people have such different points of view
about this subject? How is it that experts in the field disagree about this subject?
▫Reasoning About Current Issues Test (RCI)
Research on the Reflective Judgment Model (cont’d)•How reliable is the Reflective Judgment
Interview?▫King & Kitchener (1994) report reliabilities
from 32 studies that used the RJI: Inter-rater reliabilities range from .29 to .97 Internal consistency reliabilities range from .50
to .99
Research on the Reflective Judgment Model (cont’d)•Longitudinal design vs. cross-sectional
data•Three foci in the research
▫Development of reflective judgment over time
▫Differences in reflective judgment by age/educational level
▫Differences among academic disciplines
Research on the Reflective Judgment Model (cont’d)•More than 30 empirical studies have
studied the RJM by focusing on:▫High school students▫Traditional-aged college students▫Nontraditional-aged college students▫Graduate students▫Nonstudent adults▫Gender differences▫Cross-cultural differences
Research on the Reflective Judgment Model (cont’d)•General findings
▫Slow but steady pattern of development in reflective judgment
▫Engagement in educational activities improves individuals’ reasoning about ill-structured problems
▫Development follows the stages of the RJM▫Presence in an educational setting facilitates
development
Outcomes and Contributing Factors
“Cultivating good thinking is one of the most rewarding and important outcomes
of teaching” (King, 2000, pg. 15)
•Developmental progression from childhood to adulthood
•Slow and steady development over time•Subsequent stages•Educational activities tend to improve RJ
Outcomes and Contributing Factors (cont’d)•Development of reflective thinking•Process of acquiring knowledge•Evaluating knowledge•Able to articulate and justify their beliefs
about ill-structured problems•Development evolves holistically
Seven Assumptions to Consider Before Applying This Theory• Individuals actively interpret and attempt to make
sense of what they experience• How individuals interpret events is affected by their
epistemic assumptions• People’s ways of making meaning develop over time• Individuals function within a “developmental range”
of stages• Interaction with environment strongly affects an
individual’s development• Development is stimulated when an individual’s
experiences do not match expectations• Development in reflective thinking occurs within the
context of the individual
Application to student affairs
•Our Challenge•Where are Students Developmentally?•Challenge and Support•Give Feedback•Real-Life Issues
Criticisms
“I love a good cross!”
The Ultimate Cross Examination
•Scopes “Monkey” Trial•College study: The Belief
in God and Immortality
Reflective Judgment
•The “Teflon”® Theory
Mootness
• Internal Consistency•Sequentiality• Intra-Individual Differences
Specific Criticisms
•RJI>RCI• Ill-structured problems•Stages•Subject matter•Sample•Ernie
Activity
•Strategies for Promoting Reflective Thinking▫Groups of four
Discussion (time permitting)
•What are some examples of “ill-structured” issues that have or might arise in your assistantship/work?
Questions
EvaluationsPlease complete your evaluation.
Thank you!