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
- Record your own performance (write, record audio, or log a decision trace).
- Obtain a clear expert model of the same task.
- Compare your performance to the model at the process level, not just the outcome.
- 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.
7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).