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Ashlynn Wittchow – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Informed by post-humanism, my research examines the entanglement of more-than-human forces at the Bread Loaf School of English. The oldest professional development institution of its kind, the Bread Loaf School of English has invited teachers to spend six-weeks each summer studying at its mountain campus since the summer of 1920. When the physical…
Descriptors: Professional Development, Teachers, Summer Programs, Personal Narratives
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Andrew J. Bobilya; Tom Holman; Betsy Lindley; Esther Ayers; Christine Norton; Steve Smith; Denise Mitten; Brent J. Bell – Journal of Experiential Education, 2024
This brief article summarizes five trends and issues discussed during a moderated panel and round table discussion at the Association for Experiential Education (AEE) Symposium on Experiential Education Research (SEER) in November 2023. The aim of this session was to expand on prior documented trends and disseminate current experiential and…
Descriptors: Outdoor Education, Cultural Awareness, Diversity, Mental Health
Jenni Hayes – ProQuest LLC, 2021
Training school administrators to be more effective leaders through Missouri's Outdoor Leadership Experience is a unique concept that has been in place since 1987. Many other fields have used outdoor experiences for leadership training. This qualitative study discusses participants' perceptions of their experience and how it has impacted their…
Descriptors: School Administration, Leadership Effectiveness, Leadership Training, Outdoor Education
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Baker, Mandi; O'Brien, Wendy – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2020
The performance and embodiment of inter and intra-personal skills, or as we have conceptualised in this paper as Affective Abilities (AA), is often considered central to the fulfilment of outdoor leader roles. This article examines Australian outdoor recreation and education higher education curricula to identify what AA training opportunities are…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Outdoor Leadership, College Curriculum, Outdoor Education
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Munge, Jaclyn; Munge, Brendon; Morse, Marcus; Forsyth, Adrienne – Journal of Outdoor and Environmental Education, 2019
Journey-based outdoor leaders can be at risk of nutrient deficiencies due to repetitive menus and/or poor dietary practices, with implications for resultant personal health and work performance. Careful meal planning and nutritional understanding can help alleviate this risk. However, overall intakes are also partly dependent on the dietary…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Outdoor Education, Outdoor Leadership, Dietetics
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Michael Riley; Jim Sibthorp; Shannon Rochelle – Journal of Outdoor Recreation, Education, and Leadership, 2024
Research has articulated the benefits of autonomy in outdoor programming (e.g., Chang, 2017), and the independent student expedition (ISE) is one type of autonomous experience that has received attention across the literature. Research suggests that ISEs have the potential to foster personal growth and promote group development (e.g., Daniel et…
Descriptors: Outdoor Education, Young Adults, Adventure Education, Outdoor Leadership
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Gray, Tonia; Mitten, Denise; Potter, Tom; Kennedy, Jay – Journal of Outdoor Recreation, Education, and Leadership, 2020
While gender equity appears to be moving at glacial speed in contemporary societal debate, many argue advancement toward equitable outdoor leadership has been stymied. Hearing and responding to lived experiences and stories can be an impetus for transformational change. The experiences of all genders, as well as nonbinary and agender people,…
Descriptors: Outdoor Leadership, Gender Issues, Sex Fairness, Inclusion
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Marchand, Geneviève; McMahan, Kelli; Hester, Hailey D.; Lewis, Patrick; Friesen, Philip Zook; Hobbs, Will – Journal of Outdoor Recreation, Education, and Leadership, 2019
This paper reviews the findings of a professional task force from the Association of Outdoor Recreation and Education (AORE), which explored the feasibility of and support for a credentialing system for students and young professionals aspiring to a career in the outdoor industry. The task force used initial public discussions to design a survey,…
Descriptors: Outdoor Leadership, Credentials, Cost Effectiveness, Standards
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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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Enoksen, Elisabeth; Lynch, Pip – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2018
Recent leadership research has demonstrated a need for better understanding the process of becominga leader because it might be qualitatively different to being a leader. If so, there is likely to be a need for pedagogies designed deliberately to support first-time outdoor leadership experiences and any such pedagogies must be informed by the…
Descriptors: Outdoor Leadership, Foreign Countries, Outdoor Education, Qualitative Research
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Hutson, Garrett; Peredun, Liz; Rochelle, Shannon – Journal of Experiential Education, 2019
Background: One of the core environmental studies learning objectives at NOLS is for students to develop a "sense of place" by experiencing wilderness and exploring relationships with their surroundings. Purpose: The purpose of this study was to explore how students report developing a sense of place after completing a course based out…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Physical Environment, Ecology, Student Development
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Bobilya, Andrew J.; Lindley, Betsy R.; Faircloth, W. Brad; Holman, Tom – Journal of Outdoor Recreation, Education, and Leadership, 2017
Evidence-based programming and the importance of research has gained attention among outdoor and adventure-based programs in recent years (Sibthorp, 2009) regardless of the challenges that often accompany this type of investigation (Bialeschki, Henderson, Hickerson, & Browne, 2012). Programs must often develop their own evaluation instruments,…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Outdoor Education, Adventure Education, Evaluation Methods
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Jackson, Jeff S. – Journal of Outdoor Recreation, Education, and Leadership, 2017
The outdoor leadership field is maturing in its understanding of activity safety and objective measures of risk exposure. Patterns of injury, relative exposure between related activities, and risk profiles per user group are only just beginning to accumulate academic findings from which a collective understanding of managing adventure-based risk…
Descriptors: Injuries, Data Analysis, College Students, Leadership Training
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Collins, L.; Carson, H. J.; Amos, P.; Collins, D. – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2018
This paper utilised a two-part mixed-methodology to examine the value placed on judgement and decision-making by a sample of qualified mountain leaders in the UK. Qualified leaders (N = 331) completed a web-based survey and a smaller sample (N = 8) were then interviewed. Survey data showed that mountain leaders place greater value on their…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Value Judgment, Decision Making Skills, Outdoor Leadership
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Goldenberg, Marni; Soule, Katherine E. – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2015
Means-end theory was used to analyze differences in outcomes from original interviews and follow-up interviews occurring four years after Outward Bound (OB) and National Outdoor Leadership School (NOLS) 2006 course participation. In 2006, a semi-structured, in-person interview was conducted after participants (N = 510) completed their course. In…
Descriptors: Semi Structured Interviews, Student Attitudes, Theories, Adventure Education
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