CAS Reflection Writing Guide

Creativity, Activity, and Service (CAS) reflections are crucial for demonstrating personal growth and connecting your experiences to the IB learner profile. Meaningful reflections go beyond simple descriptions to show deep thinking and genuine development.

Understanding CAS Requirements

The Three Strands

Learning Outcomes

Your reflections must demonstrate achievement of all seven learning outcomes:

  1. Identify own strengths and develop areas for growth
  2. Demonstrate challenges have been undertaken and new skills developed
  3. Demonstrate initiative and planning skills
  4. Show commitment to and perseverance in CAS experiences
  5. Demonstrate skills and recognize benefits of working collaboratively
  6. Demonstrate engagement with issues of global significance
  7. Recognize and consider the ethics of choices and actions

Structure of Effective Reflections

The DEAL Framework

Essential Elements

Types of CAS Reflections

Initial Reflections

Before starting an experience:

Ongoing Reflections

During experiences:

Final Reflections

After completing experiences:

Connecting to IB Learner Profile

Inquirers

Knowledgeable

Thinkers

Communicators

Principled

Open-minded

Caring

Risk-takers

Balanced

Reflective

Writing Techniques for Powerful Reflections

Use Specific Examples

Instead of: "I learned to work with others."

Write: "When our fundraising team disagreed about the event format, I facilitated a compromise by suggesting we combine both ideas, which taught me that effective collaboration requires both listening and creative problem-solving."

Show Growth Through Contrast

"At the beginning of the project, I avoided speaking publicly because I feared making mistakes. By the end, I was confidently presenting our findings to the school board, having learned that preparation and practice build confidence more than natural talent."

Connect to Global Contexts

"Teaching English to refugee children made me realize how language barriers create systemic inequalities in education access, connecting my local service to the global challenge of educational equity."

Demonstrate Critical Thinking

"Initially, I assumed our environmental cleanup would have immediate visible impact. However, I learned that sustainable change requires long-term commitment and systematic approaches, not just one-time interventions."

Common Reflection Mistakes

Surface-Level Description

Generic Statements

Lack of Evidence

CAS Portfolio Organization

Experience Documentation

Reflection Placement

Evidence Collection

Assessment and Quality Indicators

Exceeding Expectations

Meeting Expectations

Areas for Improvement

Using Technology for CAS Reflections

Digital Portfolios

Word Count Management

Use CiteCount to optimize reflection length:

Remember, authentic CAS reflections demonstrate genuine personal growth and learning. Focus on honest self-assessment, specific examples, and clear connections to the IB learner profile. Your reflections should tell the story of your development as a young adult preparing for global citizenship.