(2016-04-15) Book Review Donald Schon The Reflective Practitioner
Ian Alexander: Book Review: Donald Schon - The Reflective Practitioner. Readers of my reviews will know that I have been interested for some years in the dialogue between action (do something) and reflection, discussed admirably by John Heron and Peter Reason, and put into practice in their Co-operative Inquiry method. Donald Schön is one of the seemingly few people to have written about reflection and its role in professional life; it is a tricky subject, as it lies between the domains of academia and industry, and must be both theoretically accurate and practically useful to succeed fully.
The preface starts out very promisingly, at once explaining why the book's task is hard:
I have become convinced that universities are not devoted to the production and distribution of fundamental knowledge in general. They are institutions committed, for the most part, to a particular epistemology, a view of knowledge that fosters selective inattention to practical competence and professional artistry.
The mission, then, is to create a new framework of knowledge which values practice above head-knowledge, deals with tacit knowledge and skill in a helpful way, and which shows how reflection enables the practitioner to develop and extend the knowledge available to his profession.
Schön sets out to do this through a sample of vignettes of practice, concentrating on episodes in which a senior practitioner tries to help a junior one learn to do something... The heart of this study is an analysis of the distinctive structure of reflection-in-action. (apprenticeship)
The book begins by setting out a case for the existence of a problem, namely the loss of faith in professionals through scandals, through ill-conceived projects, through hastily-introduced technologies with unforeseen side-effects... (elite)
The second chapter argues convincingly that there are limits to technical rationality; expertise only gets you so far in a world where politics, social effects, and the environment are inextricably mixed up with technical decisions. Even great thinkers like Herbert Simon are seen to be viewing the world in too limited, too Logical Positivist a way.
Schön then dives into sociological or ethnological analysis of some specific work situations, which he discusses in detail to bring out how reflection fits into the professionals' use of knowledge. He concludes that:
In this reflective conversation, the practitioner's effort to solve the reframed problem yields new discoveries which call for new reflection-in-action
Reflection-in-action is a kind of experimenting...In what sense, if any, is there rigor in on-the-spot experiment? ...
Questions such as these point to a further elaboration of reflection-in-action as an epistemology of practice
Heron, Reason, and other Action Researchers -- yes, it has become a whole field of research -- found a method that works, starting about the same time as Schön.
Peter Checkland (another contemporary working in the early 1980's), in his Soft Systems Methodology, agrees with Schön that being a 'technician' is not enough, but parts from him saying that studying cases (case study), no matter how informative, cannot lead to effective management. Checkland is rather brusque and probably unfair here, as Schön does not simply say that technical expertise is not relevant; nor does he argue for 'artificial vicarious experience' through reading case studies, but rather, invites readers to practice reflection-in-action for themselves.
Where Schön is weak is -- as quoted above -- in his reluctance to analyse the structure of reflective practice. Checkland offers his complex methodology as a solution, which it may be, at least at the level of boardroom consultancy.
Schön's book remains interesting today as a pioneering attempt to explore the boundary of 'hard' and 'soft' thinking, the role of observation and reflection in professional practice, and the limits of academic thinking
That he didn't come up with a theory of everything isn't something we should hold against him. This is a book that professionals in all disciplines should find worthwhile
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