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Mirkin, Benjamin J. – ProQuest LLC, 2013
This dissertation examined participants' expectations of the social climate on extended wilderness courses, how students' actually experienced the social climate during their course, and how these expectations, perceptions and the influence of environmental characteristics, impacted their goals for peer interactions. Pre and posttest surveys were…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Social Environment, Educational Experience, Peer Relationship
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Thomas, Glyn – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2008
A facilitator is considered to act intentionally when they are deliberate about what they are doing and can provide rationales for their actions. The same facilitator is said to practice intuitively when they are not able to articulate a clear rationale for their actions, yet they are still able to facilitate effectively. A review of the…
Descriptors: Participant Observation, Experiential Learning, Intuition, Intention
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Bisson, Christian; Luckner, John – Journal of Experiential Education, 1996
The characteristics of fun are that it is relative, situational, voluntary, and natural. Fun can have a positive effect on the learning process by inviting intrinsic motivation, suspending one's social inhibitions, reducing stress, and creating a state of relaxed alertness. Includes summary of questionnaire responses from 20 experiential education…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Educational Strategies, Emotional Response, Experiential Learning
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Brackenreg, Mark; And Others – Journal of Experiential Education, 1994
Processing outdoor adventure activities allows participants to extract meaning from their learning and to generalize new learning to other settings and situations. Thirty program administrators completed a survey identifying essential facilitator processing skills in the following categories: fostering a caring environment, general communication…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Adventure Education, Communication Skills, Competence
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Vincent, Suzanne M. – Journal of Experiential Education, 1995
Ninety-eight adventure therapy professionals analyzed a proposed definition of emotional safety and rated 26 factors hypothesized to affect an individual's level of emotional safety during adventure activities. Factors were related to specific techniques used by instructors, instructor skills and abilities, the physical environment, and group…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Counselor Client Relationship, Experiential Learning, Fear