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Gray, Sky; Yerkes, Rita – Journal of Experiential Education, 1995
Stresses the need for documenting the application and outcomes of specific adventure activities with specific client groups and documenting critical therapeutic/clinical incidents in adventure therapy programs. Overviews current trends in documentation of therapeutic adventure programs and provides recommendations from the medical and mental…
Descriptors: Accountability, Adventure Education, Critical Incidents Method, Data Collection
Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Leadership, 1993
Discusses Alan Hales's model of safety management in the context of caving. When two sets of hazards, human and environmental, are present together, risk occurs. Objective risk is uncontrollable and should be avoided in educational settings; subjective risk is controllable. Presents positive and negative strategies for engaging or avoiding…
Descriptors: Accident Prevention, Adventure Education, Educational Strategies, Experiential Learning
Spain, Mark – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Leadership, 1990
Residential, challenging, learning experiences can provide a powerful and essential education in environmental values and interpersonal relationships. Presents a basic-needs planning guide for residential adventure programs that considers the need for water, air, food, clothing, accommodation, waste disposal, health, energy, resources, love of…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Educational Environment, Educational Objectives, Environmental Education
McGowan, Michael L. – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Leadership, 1991
Problem solving in adventure programs contains physical, social, philosophical, and transcendent (insightful) elements. Through transcendent experiences students reach a high level of performance, tolerance, and understanding. Instructors often attempt to facilitate transcendent experiences through such activities as the Native American…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Experiential Learning, Group Dynamics, Individual Development
Bunyan, Peter – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Leadership, 1994
Discusses the lack of theoretical principles underpinning experiential education. Outlines a flow model of experiential learning applicable to adventure education, involving the learner, reality context, new and applied skills, responsibility, and critical reflection. Suggests that even small increases in theoretical understanding will help…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Educational Objectives, Educational Principles, Experiential Learning

Nadler, Reldan S. – Journal of Experiential Education, 1995
Suggests ways to enhance the processing of adventure-based experiences by making participants aware of their responses when they reach the edge of their own comfort zone. Participants can use this information to generalize the learning experience to home, school, and office situations. (LP)
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Consciousness Raising, Educational Objectives, Elementary Secondary Education

Garvey, Dan; Vorsteg, Anna Catherine – Journal of Experiential Education, 1992
Outlines a four-stage developmental process (exhilaration, rejection, integration, and transformation) through which college students learn to apply experiential education theories to their practices as staff interns in an adventure education program for children. Discusses implications for intern supervision and the design of internship programs.…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, College Students, Developmental Stages, Experiential Learning

Woodward, Ted – Journal of Experiential Education, 1991
Traces the development of peace-oriented experiential philosophy in both its Western and Soviet contexts, suggesting that adventure-based citizen diplomacy is a valuable means to build bridges between them. Adventure Based Citizen Diplomacy projects are working to decrease the cultural, sociopolitical, and psychological barriers that remain in the…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Citizenship, Conflict Resolution, Diplomatic History
Hovelynck, Johan – Horizons, 1999
A group solving the task of climbing a steep wall illustrates how adventure education can enable participants to trace how they get stuck in their view of things, and what it takes to adopt a new and generative image. The ability to change metaphors can be applied to core metaphors of relationships, communication, and visions of oneself. (TD)
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Attitude Change, Educational Philosophy, Experiential Learning
Maddern, Eric – Horizons, 2000
Increasing violence and suicide among adolescent boys is attributed to a lack of security in our fast-changing society and a lack of direction and value for young men. Rites of passage constructively channel the undirected energies of youth to initiate a purposeful and responsive adulthood. Nine British programs are described, and recommendations…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Adolescents, Adventure Education, Developmental Stages
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
Baker, Molly Ames – Pathways: The Ontario Journal of Outdoor Education, 1998
Suggests ways in which adventure educators can use heritage interpretation in the wilderness setting to promote understanding of the history and significance of events, people, and objects linked to particular places. Factors to consider include creating interpretive lessons, training trip leaders to conduct them, and evaluating their effect on…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Experiential Learning, Group Activities, Heritage Education
Loynes, Chris – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Leadership, 1994
Identifies competencies required for outdoor leaders in England to gain a National Vocational Qualification in training and development. Describes how an outdoor leader encouraged collaborative learning among participants on a canoeing trip and how the skills and knowledge required of the outdoor leader related to training and development…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Canoeing, Competence, Experiential Learning
Becker, Peter – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Leadership, 1996
The rising popularity of risky or exciting recreational activities that provide intensive sensory and emotional experiences is linked to a desire for an inner experience of being in the present moment. However, such bliss seeking is complicated by modern time pressures and fears of disappointment and wasted time. Challenges for experiential…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Emotional Experience, Experiential Learning, Leisure Time
Bolduc, William J. – Feedback, 1998
Undergraduates enrolled in a field video production class at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington completed a low ropes challenge course as a team-building activity. Found that the ropes course contributed to group processes and getting students to trust one another, although its contribution to building intragroup cohesiveness was…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Experiential Learning, Film Production, Group Dynamics