Community-Based Participatory Reflective Practice

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From the beginning of this journey into the principles of Community-Based Participatory Research (CBPR), it was established that health issues are not simple, and their solutions require several facets, such as political, social, and biomedical dimensions,1,3 to make it work. Therefore, as researchers develop support for equitable partnership and work toward improvement of health, several essential elements of reflective practices were involved. These elements are no one-size-fits-all but a unique set of experiences involving the researcher and the community. According to the author of an article I stumbled upon, it clearly stated that reflection is broadly defined as professional who incorporate certain action to improve their professional practice by utilizing metacognitive thinking that are deliberate and purposeful.2 It is obvious from this definition that the reflective practice relates to your own background and experiences during your involvement with the community. Reflective practice is about the way we feel or think about a particular situation or experience, which comprises of several levels such as practical reflection, which the goal is achieved, critical reflection which involved moral and ethical considerations, personalistic reflection which is about awareness, emotion, and self-knowledge, and finally, …show more content…
In working with a diverse group taught me a lot of about myself and others. In addition, as I progress through the intervention, I also learned that as humans, we have more in common than not. At the beginning, I was somewhat reluctant because of my biases and prejudices, which stemmed from my cultural and educational background. This made it difficult for me to immediately adopt at first, however, as the weeks rolled by, I had to address the social and environment issues involving persons who are different than