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Showing 151 to 165 of 379 results Save | Export
Watters, Ron – 2001
Any outdoor educator knows about rules. Outdoor educators spend a considerable amount of time at conferences talking about them: risk management plans, accepted safety practices, and first aid protocols. You name it, they've got a rule. When a Buddhist friend asked if rules really made programs safer, the author's first response was yes. His…
Descriptors: Accident Prevention, Essays, Group Dynamics, Group Unity
McDonald, Peter – Horizons, 1997
Criticizes the New Zealand approach to outdoor leadership, which relies on teaching risk assessment and management from manuals and checklists and which asserts that risk-management skills are transferable between risky sports. Suggests that sound outdoor practice involves more than "legal duty of care," and recommends reliance on…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Educational Attitudes, Foreign Countries, Leadership Qualities
Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Leadership, 1996
Analyzes a situation in which a group of adolescents on an outdoor adventure trip experienced emotional distress after a participant became ill, was evacuated by the group, and was taken to the hospital. Recommends strategies for the instructor that would have prevented emotional distress, including maintaining a proper perspective of the…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Adventure Education, Emotional Response, Intervention
Barcott, Bruce – Horizons, 2002
A high-profile liability case concerning a fatal ice-climbing accident provides the background for this discussion of liability issues in adventure activities. A brief history of outdoor adventure litigation, emerging trends, and how outdoor guides can protect themselves and their clients is presented. Guides should candidly describe the risks…
Descriptors: Accidents, Adventure Education, Court Litigation, Insurance
Bibby, Phil – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Leadership, 1990
Contrasts the instructional process for canoeing (explanation of the skill, demonstration, imitation by trainees, correction of errors by the instructor, and trials for further practice) with the coaching process (observation by the coach, analysis of technique by coach, goal setting, trials of modified behavior by trainee, observation and…
Descriptors: Canoeing, Feedback, Individual Differences, Leadership Styles
Everard, Bertie – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Leadership, 1992
Soon there will be national occupational standards of competence for managers of outdoor education and recreation centers in the United Kingdom. Charlotte Mason Management Services has mounted a competence-based residential course for outdoor and environmental center managers. Fewer than half the participating managers have had any previous…
Descriptors: Competency Based Education, Foreign Countries, Job Training, Management Development
Priest, Simon – Pathways to Outdoor Communication, 1992
Attitudes toward various outdoor leadership competencies and differences in approaches to selection, training, assessment, and certification of outdoor leadership candidates were examined among 169 experts from 5 English-speaking countries. U.S. experts had the most extreme attitudes and were concerned about insurance, litigation, and land…
Descriptors: Certification, Leadership, Leadership Training, Outdoor Education
Millette, Margot; Porter, Tom – Pathways: The Ontario Journal of Outdoor Education, 2001
A study found that male and female co-leaders of wilderness camping trips were very aware of stereotypes of male and female leadership roles. Sometimes leaders deliberately performed stereotypical tasks and roles of the opposite sex, but tasks and roles generally resulted from preferences, necessity, or participant expectations. The D-R model of…
Descriptors: Camping, Cooperation, Females, Foreign Countries
Ringer, Martin; Spanoghe, Francoise – Zip Lines: The Voice for Adventure Education, 1997
Makes suggestions to help leaders of adventure and experiential learning activities deal with participants' emotions and issues of emotional safety and risk: acknowledge the situation, be clear about what is being done, monitor individuals' actions in the group, make sure the activity is physically safe, and be aware of participants' conscious and…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Fear, Group Dynamics, Outdoor Leadership
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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
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Coates, Tom – Journal of the Wilderness Education Association, 2005
The Wilderness Education Association's (WEA) 18-Point Curriculum emphasizes experiential teaching and learning and is based on a central belief that wilderness education and outdoor leadership are essential in order to elevate preservation in the minds of students and future leaders, help develop a land ethic congruent with the ideals of the…
Descriptors: Outdoor Education, Experiential Learning, Outdoor Leadership, Curriculum Development
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McCleod, Beth; Allen-Craig, Sandy – Australian Journal of Outdoor Education, 2007
In this paper we examine the effect an outdoor and experiential education program on the life effectiveness skills of its participants. A private boys school in Melbourne focused on the challenging time of year nine to implement a program they hoped would enable the boys to develop life effectiveness skills in the areas of time management, social…
Descriptors: Outdoor Education, Outcomes of Education, Experiential Learning, Daily Living Skills
Gullion, Laurie – 1996
The value of light-hearted play in teaching technical recreational sport skills is immense. Children as well as adults can learn more quickly and completely with a games-oriented approach. Often without realizing the hidden goal of excellent skiing or paddling, participants respond to intriguing tasks in a game, immerse themselves in good…
Descriptors: Canoeing, Games, Group Dynamics, Outdoor Leadership
Schimelpfenig, Tod – 1994
This paper discusses subjective hazards in wilderness activities and suggests means of assessing and managing related risks. Wilderness educators conveniently group hazards into objective and subjective ones. Objective hazards such as rockfall, moving water, and weather, while not necessarily predictable, are visible and understandable. Subjective…
Descriptors: Accident Prevention, Adventure Education, Attitudes, Evaluative Thinking
Jones, Rob, Comp. – 1999
This proceedings of a conference on outdoor recreation and education contains conference papers and summaries of presentations and panel sessions. Following a summary of conference activities, the 14 entries are: "Working Together in Outdoor Programming: How Can It Work for You?" (W. T. Taylor, Jim Gilbert, Patsy Kott, Linda…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, College Programs, Higher Education, Outdoor Education
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