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Showing 106 to 120 of 218 results Save | Export
Cassidy, Kate; Lacey, Mark – Taproot, 1998
Effective adventure programming is explained in terms of the "significant learning" experience, involving periods of tension, questioning, and transfer during personal and social learning. Adventure programming that is supportive, adaptive, and properly sequenced maximizes the potential of significant learning. Trust- and…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Experiential Learning, Group Dynamics, Learning Processes
Leckie, Linda – Pathways: The Ontario Journal of Outdoor Education, 1996
Personal narrative links elements of a dog sledding trip with the transformational curriculum model as applied to outdoor education. Describes the physical, mental, and spiritual challenges of a seven-day winter camping and dog sledding trip, during which students learned responsibility through experience and natural consequences and realized the…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Camping, Experiential Learning, Foreign Countries
Ogilvie, Ken – Horizons, 2000
Outlines environmental, equipment, and social changes related to the Duke of Edinburgh's Award Expedition since 1956, and debates the need to restore the expedition's physical challenge or to emphasize the developmental inner journey of the mind and spirit. Considers whether the purpose of the expedition is a physical challenge or a developmental…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Camping, Educational Change, Educational Objectives
Hovelynk, Johan – Horizons, 2000
Views experiential learning as metaphor development. If a participant's enactment of a personal metaphor leads to an impasse during an adventure activity, this moment of "stuckness" is an opportunity to develop new images that generate new options for action. Facilitators must be sensitive to such situations and assist in widening…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Educational Strategies, Experiential Learning, Individual Development
Bartle, Mike – Horizons, 2000
Technology is influencing the evolution of adventure and outdoor education. Technology can negate adventure by dispelling the need of skill and mastery for attainment and by fostering a consumer mentality. Technology can enhance adventure by creating new experiences and suggesting that more is now possible. The challenge is to embody appropriate…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Appropriate Technology, Educational Change, Learning Experience
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Cassidy, Kathy – Journal of Experiential Education, 2001
For true learning to occur, participants in experiential programs must be given the opportunity to explore personally meaningful concepts that come from their own history, context, and feelings. The different stages of experiential learning and the role of the facilitator in connecting experiences to the ongoing life story of each participant are…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Educational Philosophy, Educational Strategies, Experiential Learning
Horwood, Bert – 1992
A professor of outdoor and experiential education reflects on the development of group relations and on lessons in outdoor ethics learned during a canoe trip in the Canadian Arctic. Written to celebrate a transforming experience, this paper illustrates the experiential learning and individual development that can result from intensive outdoor…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Canoeing, Ethics, Experiential Learning
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Beidler, Peter G. – Journal of Experiential Education, 1985
Uses excerpts from student journals to describe effect on writing style and content of a two-day camping and challenge experience for college freshmen in remedial writing course. (LFL)
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Enrichment Activities, Experiential Learning, Higher Education
McClintock, Mary – 1996
Lesbian baiting, the attempt to control women's "unacceptable" behavior by labeling them as lesbians, is the intersection of two forms of oppression--sexism and homophobia. Sexism is the systematic subordination of women, based on the belief in the inherent superiority of men. Sexism has defined the roles that men and women fill in order…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Females, Feminism, Homophobia
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Brookes, Andrew – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2003
"Neo-Hahnian" approaches to outdoor adventure education assume their programs "build character." Social psychology research has found that "character" is almost entirely illusory. Outdoor adventure education programs may provide situations that elicit certain behaviors, but the belief in character building must be…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Bias, Context Effect, Criticism
Miner, Todd – Taproot, 2003
Decreasing emphasis on the environment in outdoor and adventure education is resulting in ecologically less knowledgeable participants. It is critical that the environment continue to be part of these programs for three reasons: citizenship and stewardship; empathy and counterbalancing a narcissistic focus on thrills; and opportunities to get in…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Citizenship Responsibility, Educational Objectives, Elementary Secondary Education
Ryan, Bob – Zip Lines: The Voice for Adventure Education, 2002
Project Adventure (PA) offers certification for adventure program managers and two levels of challenge course practitioners. PA feels certification is timely because other fields have certification programs that work well, PA has been using competency-based certification for their own staff successfully for 8 years, the field has recently…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Certification, Competency Based Education, Experiential Learning
Zimmerman, Bill – Zip Lines: The Voice for Adventure Education, 2002
Organizations should envision accreditation as an opportunity for growth and learning. Accreditation can distinguish an organization by improving its ability to attract resources, employees, and customers. Accredited organizations gain credibility with the public. Accreditation can serve as a mechanism for marketing and referrals. Accreditation…
Descriptors: Accountability, Accreditation (Institutions), Adventure Education, Advocacy
Roycroft, Philip – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Leadership, 1994
Contrasts the spontaneity and magic of remembered childhood adventures with artificial irrelevant professionalized adventure activities that result in the disempowerment of young people. Calls for a different style of outdoor leadership focused on coaching and facilitating young people as they apply their own strategies to high-risk areas of their…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Adolescents, Adventure Education, Leadership Styles
Huskins, John – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Leadership, 1991
Advocates focusing on personal and social education in outdoor education, before addressing subjects in the National Curriculum in Britain. Discusses the development of professionalism in outdoor educators. Provides an assessment of progress scale for the goals related to professionalism. Proposes that outdoor education may be more secure as part…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Curriculum, Disadvantaged Youth, Elementary Secondary Education
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