Developing the Professional Competence of Pre-Service English Language Teachers Through A Reflective Approach: Theoretical Foundations and Experimental Evidence
Abstract
This study examines the effectiveness of a reflective approach in developing the professional competence of pre-service English language teachers. Drawing on established theories of reflection, including experiential learning (Morris, 2020), the reflective practitioner model (Helyer, 2015), structured reflective frameworks (Bassot, 2016), and the ALACT model (Korthagen, 2017), the research integrates these perspectives into a unified pedagogical system based on 3R+ technology (Reflect, Reframe, Reform + Continuous Professional Development). A quasi-experimental design was employed with 423 participants from three higher education institutions. The experimental group (n = 211) engaged in structured reflective modules, while the control group (n = 212) followed traditional instruction. Professional competence was assessed across motivational, gnoseological, practical, and reflective components. Statistical analysis revealed significant post-intervention differences between groups, χ²(2, N = 423) = 38.11, p < .001, with a medium-to-large effect size (Cramér’s V ≈ .30). The proportion of high-level competence in the experimental group increased from 18% to 43%, while low-level indicators decreased from 43% to 12%. The findings provide strong empirical evidence that a structured reflective approach functions as a transformative pedagogical technology in teacher education.