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Roger T. Couture – Physical Educator, 2023
Adventure-based teaching can foster social and personal growth yet can scare and cause long-lasting anxiety in some group members. This study examined the effects of a simple distraction to lower stress levels during an approaching scary event. Forty-eight males (M = 20.2 years) were randomly assigned to one of four groups. The stressor involved…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Fear, Anxiety, Stress Management
Lynsey Melhuish; George Ryan – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2024
This article considers the epistemological chain in adventure sports coaching through personal experiences of undergraduate adventure students using semi-structured interviews and qualitative thematic analysis. Findings showed many observable practices utilised by adventure sport coaches were epistemologically sophisticated. This included…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Student Attitudes, Epistemology, Adventure Education
Bolick, Cheryl Mason; Nilsen, Ryan – Journal of Outdoor Recreation, Education, and Leadership, 2019
Research on individuals' experiences engaging in outdoor education programs suggests participants are impacted in a number of ways. This study investigated the impact of participation in a wilderness education course on undergraduates' experiences with public service. This study asked the research question, what is the impact of an Outward Bound…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Undergraduate Students, Service Learning, Program Effectiveness
Hahn, Micah; Van Wyck, Rebecca; Seater, Mariah A.; Marvin, Alicia F. – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2022
Adventure-based learning is used by behavioral health providers to connect clients to therapeutic activities outside traditional settings. These approaches often aim to build internal and external assets that support positive youth development. Here we evaluate the impact of an experiential learning curriculum on youth development and identify…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Adventure Education, Mental Health, Therapy
Robertson, Phyllis; Graves, Elizabeth; Bobilya, Andrew J.; Murdock, Todd; Brotherton, Dale; Hunter, Sara – Journal of Outdoor Recreation, Education, and Leadership, 2020
This exploratory study examined the benefits of participating in a three-week, multi-state bicycling trip for eight adolescents who participated in a first-generation, college-bound program. The primary purpose of this study was to explore participants' perceptions of their own resilience, independence, responsibility, and problem-solving and to…
Descriptors: Educational Benefits, First Generation College Students, Resilience (Psychology), Student Attitudes
Mott, Melanie; Martin, Andrew J. – Journal of Outdoor and Environmental Education, 2017
Risk is a complex component of outdoor adventure education (OAE) that can both enhance and diminish meaningful learning experiences. Outdoor professionals are searching for the balance between providing a high level of safety and challenging students through outdoor adventure activities. This case study of Outward Bound New Zealand (OBNZ) utilised…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Adventure Education, Outdoor Education, Risk
Laraway, Melissa J. – ProQuest LLC, 2018
Orientation programs on college campuses across the United States exist to serve the needs of new students to transition and thrive in their new setting. Some students may arrive on campus for even more specialized programs beyond traditional orientation programs, such as athletic practice, that focus on academic courses or involve a wilderness…
Descriptors: Outdoor Education, Student Attitudes, Student Participation, Self Efficacy

Leroy, Erik – Journal of Experiential Education, 1983
Through an introduction to some of the literature and personalities of the adventuring tradition, the article explains several common elements of various forms of adventure: degree of difficulty, element of danger, commitment, and understandable stress. It also questions and explains the purpose of adventure experiences. (SB)
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Difficulty Level, Experiential Learning, Literature
Bunyan, Peter; Boniface, Maggie – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Leadership, 1995
Fifteen college students having no prior experience with abseiling completed a simple 80-foot abseil after indoor instruction. Students' sensation-seeking scores were weakly and negatively related to somatic anxiety immediately prior to the abseil. Enjoyment of the abseil had a weak positive relationship to sensation seeking and a weak negative…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Anxiety, College Students, Foreign Countries
Anderson, Lynn; Anderson, Dale; Young, Anderson – 2000
In 1989, Ewert and Hollenhorst proposed the Adventure Recreation Model to describe participant characteristics, behaviors, and motivations with regard to adventure recreation activities. The model relates participant attributes (frequency of participation, skill and experience level, locus of control, and motivation factors) to activity/setting…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, College Students, Higher Education, Models
Hatch, Katharine D.; McCarthy, Christopher J. – Journal for Specialists in Group Work, 2003
Challenge course participation is becoming increasingly recognized as an alternative intervention for improving group functioning. A preliminary investigation of challenge course participation among students who later participated in an experiential training group as part of a graduate-level group counseling course is discussed. Findings indicated…
Descriptors: Group Counseling, Adventure Education, Counselor Training, Graduate Study
Harris, Ian – Horizons, 2000
A study examining the effect of outdoor adventure experience on student self-concept surveyed 30 British secondary students in a 5-day residential outdoor course and a control group of 30 students. Self-concept scores of the experimental group rose during the course and 3 months later, while the control group showed no significant change. (TD)
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Foreign Countries, Individual Development, Outcomes of Education

Dyson, Ben P. – Journal of Teaching in Physical Education, 1995
Reports a study of third- and fifth-grade students' perceptions of their physical education programs at two urban alternative schools. The students highlighted goals such as cooperating with others, challenging themselves, and taking risks. They reported several success factors, especially trusting each other, problem solving, attitudes toward…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Adventure Education, Communication Skills, Cooperative Learning