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November 08, 2025, 03:15:52 pm

Author Topic: Personal reflection pieces  (Read 903 times)  Share 

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katiesaliba

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Personal reflection pieces
« on: July 15, 2014, 11:10:05 pm »
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Recently, a lecturer told me that choosing to write a personal reflective piece is best for context writing. My school is studying 'identity and belonging', so I suppose this form of writing should work best. However, will a personal reflection be considered boring if it doesn't tackle big issues like racism and immigration? I don't want to write a 'petty' piece that will be considered 'pathetic' by examiners. What topics should be avoided? Thanks :)
Bachelor of Science (Immunology major) - The University of Melbourne

meganrobyn

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Re: Personal reflection pieces
« Reply #1 on: July 17, 2014, 10:30:25 am »
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Cliche should be avoided. Like the plague. The exact topic is less important.

Writing a piece exploring something seemingly 'small' can therefore be one of the very best ways to avoid cliche, and to have depth.

You need to be personal; you need to be authentic/honest; you need to have depth; and you need to NOT be cliche. Just work with those.
[Update: full for 2018.] I give Legal lectures through CPAP, and am an author for the CPAP 'Legal Fundamentals' textbook and the Legal 3/4 Study Guide.
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