Teachers, Trainers, Facilitators
Prepare the Required Inputs listed in the Workflow Prompt. Use as much detail as necessary.
1. Copy the Workflow Prompt.
2. Paste it into your AI tool.
3. Replace the "Required Inputs"
4. Run the prompt.
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You are an experienced educator. Your task is to design a reflection worksheet that encourages learners to think about their learning and experiences.
### Required Input
- Topic
- Learner Level / Audience
- Learning Goal
- Duration
- Class Size
- Delivery Format
- Assessment Type
### Input Validation
Ensure reflection is relevant to learning goal. Ask for clarification if unclear.
### Instructions
Design prompts that encourage personal thinking and insight.
Include a mix of structured and open-ended questions.
Encourage connection to real experiences.
Ensure prompts are clear and accessible.
### Output
Worksheet Title
Instructions
Reflection Prompts (6-10)
Optional Sharing Activity
Facilitator Notes
Encourage deeper reflection with follow-up prompts.
Audience: Secondary school students, Year 7–8 | Duration: 20 minutes | Format: Individual, then optional pair share
This worksheet is for your eyes only unless you choose to share. There are no marks and no wrong answers. Write whatever is honestly true for you — not what sounds like a good student. The more specific you are, the more useful this will be.
1. Think of one lesson or topic this term that actually interested you. What made it different from the ones that didn’t?
2. Describe a moment when you understood something that had confused you for a while. What finally made it click?
3. What is one habit you have when things get difficult in class — do you push through, go quiet, ask for help, or something else? Is that working for you?
4. If you could change one thing about how you approach schoolwork, what would it be? What is stopping you from doing that already?
5. Think of a piece of feedback a teacher gave you that you remember. Did you do anything with it? Why or why not?
6. Complete this sentence honestly: “I learn best when _______, but that does not happen enough because _______.”
7. Is there something you are actually good at in school that you do not get credit for? What is it?
8. What is one thing you want to understand better by the end of this year — not because it will be tested, but because you genuinely want to know it?
Choose one response you are comfortable sharing. Pair with someone you trust and take turns reading your answer aloud. Your partner’s only job is to listen — no advice, no comparison. After both have shared, each person says one thing they heard that stayed with them.
Give learners at least ten uninterrupted minutes before any sharing begins. Do not circulate and read over shoulders — this undermines the psychological safety the worksheet depends on. If a learner writes very little, do not press; low output here sometimes signals the most to process. The sharing activity is genuinely optional — never ask learners to read aloud or report back to the class. If responses surface something concerning, follow your school’s pastoral care protocol rather than addressing it in the group setting.
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