Structured reflection on performance

Systematically compare your performance to an expert model to build accurate self-assessment.

Why it works

Novices typically lack the reference point needed to accurately judge their own performance. Structured comparison against an explicit expert standard gives the novice a calibration tool: they can see the gap between what they did and what expertise looks like. This comparison drives accurate self-monitoring, which is the metacognitive capacity that allows independent improvement after coaching ends.

How to do it

  1. Record your own performance (write, record audio, or log a decision trace).
  2. Obtain a clear expert model of the same task.
  3. Compare your performance to the model at the process level, not just the outcome.
  4. Write down three specific differences and one hypothesis about which to address first.

Evidence

Structured self-assessment linked to external standards improves calibration and subsequent learning — a finding consistent across deliberate practice research and formative assessment literature. (observational)

The comparison-to-expert model is a conceptual component of cognitive apprenticeship; controlled studies isolating this specific reflection format are limited. The broader self-assessment literature supports the principle.

Common mistake

Reflecting only on outcomes ("I got it right/wrong") rather than process ("where did my reasoning diverge from the expert model"), which yields no actionable information about what to change.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach surfaces expert-process traces alongside your own and guides you through a structured comparison that identifies the specific reasoning gap to close in the next session.

Start with IX Coach

7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).