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Showing 1 to 15 of 22 results Save | Export
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Gerbers, Kellie; Marchand, Geneviève – New Directions for Student Leadership, 2021
This chapter considers outdoor leadership in higher education with specific consideration as to how upper- and middle-class values continue to influence accepted norms and assumptions related to skill development and leadership learning. Suggested approaches to make outdoor programs more class-conscious and inclusive are provided.
Descriptors: Social Class, Outdoor Leadership, Leadership Training, Higher Education
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Bell, Martha – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2017
Adventure has outgrown its use as a metaphor and motive for educational journeys into the cultural outdoors. Self-reliance cannot counter the mechanisation of everyday life. "Adventure" is produced and serviced by the very people who felt its worth to their own individualisation and now advance its professionalisation for their own…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Outdoor Education, Risk, Learning Theories
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Thomas, Glyn – Australian Journal of Outdoor Education, 2011
My research, exploring the theories and practices of facilitator educators, led me to ask questions about some potential gaps in outdoor leadership texts published in the last six years. Do the authors and editors of these texts focus on the things that are really important to the effective practice of outdoor leadership? My research with…
Descriptors: Outdoor Leadership, Leadership Training, Textbooks, Textbook Content
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Warren, Karen; Roberts, Nina S.; Breunig, Mary; Alvarez, M. Antonio G. – Journal of Experiential Education, 2014
Outdoor experiential education has often been critiqued for its White, male, middle/upper-class, able-bodied history, thereby causing professionals and programs to consider issues of social justice. This state of knowledge paper will review the literature on social and environmental justice, identify gaps in current social justice literature and…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Outdoor Education, Experiential Learning, Literature Reviews
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Shooter, Wynn; Sibthorp, Jim; Paisley, Karen – Journal of Experiential Education, 2009
Successful hiring, training, and pairing or grouping of staff requires administrators to consider the relationship between their programs' goals and the specific outdoor leadership skills of individual leaders. Authors have divided outdoor leadership skills into a three-category structure, and models of outdoor leadership have focused on skills…
Descriptors: Outdoor Leadership, Experiential Learning, Personnel Selection, Models
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Zmudy, Mark H.; Curtner-Smith, Matthew D.; Steffen, Jeff – Journal of Experiential Education, 2009
Many of the characteristics of effective physical education lessons have been discovered by sport pedagogy researchers by employing what has become known as the ecological or task structures perspective. The purpose of this study was to describe the task structures and ecology that existed in two consecutive 7-day summer adventure camps run by an…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Adventure Education, Teaching Methods, Experiential Learning
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Goldenberg, Marni; Pronsolino, Dan – Journal of Experiential Education, 2008
This study compares outcomes associated with participation in Outward Bound (OB) and National Outdoor Leadership Schools (NOLS) courses in the United States. OB and NOLS (two of the largest providers of outdoor adventure education [OAE] courses) combined saw more than 30,000 students in 2006 (NOLS, n.d.; Outward Bound, n.d.). Comparing these two…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Group Experience, Outdoor Leadership, Cognitive Mapping
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Sibthorp, Jim; Paisley, Karen; Gookin, John; Furman, Nate – Journal of Experiential Education, 2008
Allowing students a sense of autonomy has long been considered an important pedagogical tool. This paper synthesizes the current literature on student autonomy from the education, youth development, and outdoor adventure fields and explores its value through an analysis of data from the National Outdoor Leadership School (NOLS). The results…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Outdoor Leadership, Personal Autonomy, Teaching Methods
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Tozer, Mark; Fazey, Ioan; Fazey, John – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2007
Adaptive expertise, an individual's ability to perform flexibly and innovatively in novel and unstructured situations, could have particular relevance for expedition and outdoor leaders. This element may be recognized in leadership practitioners who are able to act more effectively when problem-solving in complex, ambiguous and unpredictable…
Descriptors: Outdoor Leadership, Expertise, Thinking Skills, Problem Solving
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Ewert, Alan; Wu, Guan-Jang – Journal of the Wilderness Education Association, 2007
Outdoor adventure activities such as whitewater boating, caving, rock climbing, and mountaineering continue to be popular among the public. As a result of this popularity, numerous organizations "contract out" the leadership and delivery of the adventure portion of their curriculum. This paper explores two widely used venues for offering outdoor…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Outdoor Leadership, Risk, Decision Making Skills
Dixon, Tim; Priest, Simon – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Leadership, 1991
Responses of 75 expert outdoor leaders from Canada and the United States concerning leadership in 12 hypothetical backpacking scenarios provided partial support for a theory that predicted probability of leadership style (democratic, autocratic, or abdicratic) based on favorability of conditions, task orientation, and relationship orientation.…
Descriptors: Behavior Theories, Context Effect, Leadership Styles, Models
McAvoy, Leo; Roehl, Jim; Rynders, John – 2002
Integrated adventure programs are those in which persons with and without disabilities participate together in planned adventure activities. A study sought to identify the leadership competencies necessary for leaders of integrated outdoor adventure programs and to measure the effectiveness of a staff training addressing one of these competencies.…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Competence, Leadership Qualities, Leadership Training
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Thomas, Glyn – Australian Journal of Outdoor Education, 2007
In this paper I discuss some of the strengths and weaknesses of two different approaches to teaching motor skills to students in outdoor education and outdoor recreation settings. Using acronyms to describe their stages: DEDICT is a six step, direct instructional model that some outdoor leaders may already be familiar with; and FERAL is my…
Descriptors: Outdoor Leadership, Outdoor Education, Skill Development, Direct Instruction
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Poff, Raymond; Harris, Matthew; Spencer, Steve – Journal of the Wilderness Education Association, 2005
The purpose of this article is to report the findings of a study, conducted among Wilderness Education Association Affiliates, aimed at understanding the service-learning options provided. Several definitions and viewpoints regarding service-learning can be found throughout the literature; only a few are presented to introduce the topic. E-mails…
Descriptors: Outdoor Education, Service Learning, Educational Experience, Outdoor Leadership
Irwin, Cheryl; Phipps, Maurice – 1994
For over 7 years, the Wilderness Education Association (WEA) and three universities have been using a systematic approach to leadership training in the outdoors: the experiential leadership education (ELE) method. The effectiveness of this approach was investigated by an aerospace expert interested in leadership training for isolated groups. A…
Descriptors: Aerospace Industry, Experiential Learning, Higher Education, Leadership Styles
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