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Prouty, Dick – Zip Lines: The Voice for Adventure Education, 2000
Creativity is valued increasingly in business and education. Humor, fun, and play take the brain from a cognitive, rule-bound state to a more fluid state where the whole body can work on a problem while the "thinking mind" is relaxed. Vignettes demonstrate how adventure education stimulates creativity through play, fun, humor, and…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Creativity, Educational Environment, Experiential Learning
Terry, Nancy; Schoel, Jim – Zip Lines: The Voice for Adventure Education, 2000
Creativity is the ultimate therapeutic experience because it validates the creator's abilities and allows the risk taking that enables growth. An adventure therapy session involving a group of recovering adult substance abusers illustrates how creativity is used to organize the group, determine the group's needs, generate meaning, and translate…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Behavior Change, Creativity, Empowerment
Baker-Graham, Abi – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Leadership, 1994
Argues that outdoor education is, in its own right, a creative form of learning. Draws parallels between stages of personal development in real life and in caving (as an example of outdoor education). Includes citations from Maslow's work that are applicable to outdoor and adventure education activities. Notes the importance of preparing outdoor…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Creative Development, Creativity, Discovery Learning
Carrick, Moe – Zip Lines: The Voice for Adventure Education, 2000
Adventure consultation for businesses has the power and the tools to foster creative genius and grow corporate soul, to counteract the gravitational pull of corporate normalcy, referred to as the "corporate hairball." As the adventure consultant industry grows, it must beware of choking on its own hairballs. Five warning signs of…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Change Agents, Consultants, Corporate Education
Heindel, Clark; Furlong, Lisa – Zip Lines: The Voice for Adventure Education, 2000
E. Paul Torrance believed that creativity, like other skills, could be taught. His test to assess creativity is described. Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi believes that the right combination of personal characteristics and encouraging environment produces creativity, and that children cannot be taught creativity. The adventure process creates an…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Creativity, Creativity Research, Creativity Tests
Prouty, Dick – Zip Lines: The Voice for Adventure Education, 2002
For 30 years, Project Adventure (PA) has created adventure education programs that help participants face their fears, understand how others feel, and build creative group process. School-based PA programs help students take responsibility for their own behavior, while PA techniques are widely used in adventure programs for at-risk and adjudicated…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Behavior Change, Conflict Resolution, Creativity