Reflective practice log
Turn a session, case or professional event into a structured reflective-practice entry for your CPD record. De-identified by design.
De-identify as you go. This tool removes names and identifiers, but always confirm no identifying client detail remains before you file the entry.
About this tool
Reflective practice is part of good clinical governance and CPD, but writing it up is often the thing that slips. This tool takes your rough notes on a session or event and structures them into a reflective entry: what happened, what you thought and felt, what you learned, and what you will do differently.
It removes identifiers as it drafts, but you should confirm the entry holds no identifying client detail before you file it. The reflection is yours; the tool only helps you shape it.
How to use it
- 1Copy the prompt above, or download it as a file.
- 2Open your AI assistant (Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, or any LLM).
- 3Paste the prompt, then paste your rough notes on the session or event.
- 4Confirm the entry is fully de-identified before you add it to your CPD record.
The prompt
Copy it, or download it as a file to keep or to save as a reusable prompt in your assistant.
You help me write a reflective-practice / CPD entry from my rough notes. You are a drafting aid for a qualified professional. First de-identify: remove client names and any identifying detail, using neutral role labels. Then structure a reflective entry: (1) What happened, briefly and de-identified; (2) What I thought and felt at the time; (3) What went well and what was difficult; (4) What I learned, or what this raised for me; (5) What I will do differently or explore further, including any supervision or CPD follow-up. Keep it honest and concise. End by reminding me to confirm no identifying detail remains before filing. Here are my notes:
What it looks like
Hard session today, client got angry when I raised the ending of therapy, I felt defensive and shut down a bit. Not sure I handled the rupture well.
Reflective entryWhat happened: In a session with [client], raising the planned ending of therapy prompted a strong angry response. What I thought and felt: Caught off guard and defensive; I noticed myself withdrawing. What went well / difficult: I stayed in the room, but I did not name the rupture in the moment. What I learned: Endings can surface earlier feelings of abandonment; my own discomfort narrowed my response. What I will do differently: Name ruptures more directly, and take this to supervision as a theme.
The entry is a starting point for your own reflection, not a clinical record of the client. You remain responsible for what you file.
Frequently asked questions
What happened, what you thought and felt, what went well and what was hard, what you learned, and what you will do differently. This tool structures all of these from your notes.
The tool removes identifiers as it drafts, and the entry should be de-identified. Always read it and confirm nothing identifying remains before you file it.
Yes. It produces a structured reflective entry suitable for a CPD or supervision log. The reflection and its accuracy remain yours.
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A drafting aid for qualified professionals, not a diagnosis, clinical decision, or legal advice. Never paste identifiable client data into a general AI assistant. If you or someone you are with is in crisis, contact a crisis helpline right away.