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McKenzie, Marcia – Pathways: The Ontario Journal of Outdoor Education, 2002
Interviews and surveys of 98 students and 7 instructors in Outward Bound Canada found that specific aspects of course activities, the physical environment, instructors, and participants influenced course outcomes. As role models, instructors made a greater contribution to student interpersonal skills than most other course components. Implications…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Educational Practices, Foreign Countries, Group Dynamics
Gassner, Michael – Horizons, 2002
Outdoor adventure educators need a solid foundation in theoretical knowledge that will influence and guide equally important practical skills. A strong sense of professional practice should be instilled in new outdoor adventure educators to prevent them from becoming insulated in their ideas and practices. Philosophical underpinnings and good…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Leadership Qualities
Badzmierowski, William F. – Camping Magazine, 1990
Describes outdoor leadership training program for disadvantaged children at Holiday Home Camp, Williams Bay, Wisconsin. Describes program objectives, progress levels, training courses, and activities. Describes grade-level training process. Program designed to help inner-city youth find sense of pride and self-esteem while improving life skills.…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Camping, Counselor Training, Course Organization
Chase, Charles – Camping Magazine, 1990
Describes two-step exercise for applying imagination to summer-camp programing. Step 1 involves casting programs in imaginary environment, altering them for new setting. Step 2 involves role playing, encouraging participants to "wear" new cultural roles such as American Indians, cowboys, or sailors. Emphasizes value of imagination for improving…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Camping, Creative Thinking, Elementary Secondary Education
Bradley, Martin J.; Brown, Linda E. – Campus Activities Programming, 1989
Organizational growth in student government, Greek-affiliated organizations, and activities councils can occur through the use of properly planned student leadership training programs. Low adventure training can enhance such programs while promoting optimal organizational and personal growth, providing a framework from which to view group…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, College Students, Developmental Tasks, Extracurricular Activities
Bowles, Steve – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Leadership, 1995
Overviews philosophies related to the principles of adventure education and stresses the need to create a theory of adventure education in which concepts such as enchantment, happiness, awareness, and the mystical are central; the natural world is included; concepts are created that stay true to the essence of adventure education; and thought and…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Consciousness Raising, Educational Change, Educational Principles

Davis-Berman, Jennifer; And Others – Journal of Experiential Education, 1994
Examination of 31 therapeutic wilderness programs specializing in mental health treatment revealed that most programs served high-risk youth using a variety of outdoor modalities; that there was not a consensus on the definition of therapeutic; and that, in most cases, nonprofessional staff were responsible for therapeutic interventions. (LP)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Adventure Education, At Risk Persons, Credentials
Priest, Simon – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Leadership, 1990
Outdoor leaders with sound judgment can gather many specific experiences, induce them into a collection of general concepts, store these as memory maps in the mind, later recall the general concepts as needed, and deduce a specific prediction from them. Proposes that evaluative reflection after a judgment is made is the component missing from most…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Cognitive Processes, Decision Making, Deduction

Lewinsky, Tricia Zacharias; And Others – Volta Review, 1992
The development of an integrated, experience-based "Canoe" unit for a class of children (ages four and five) with profound hearing impairments is recounted, including initiating experiences (such as making a cardboard canoe), using the children's interests as the basis of unit development, and organizing a culminating one-day camping trip. (DB)
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Camping, Class Activities, Deafness
Raines, J. Thayer – Camping Magazine, 1991
Describes Challenge Wilderness Camp (Bradford, Vermont), a 4-week residential program designed to teach boys, ages 9-16, environmental ethics through first-hand experiences. The camp incorporates land and waste management policies and procedures; programs in outdoor skills instruction; and wilderness trips including backpacking, off-trail hiking,…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Camping, Conservation (Environment), Conservation Education
McGowan, Michael – Horizons, 2000
Nineteen practitioners, academics, and students of outdoor and adventure education explored the role of adventure education in promoting spiritual development at a think tank held in 1999 in Cumbria (England). Discussions on the nature of spirituality, outdoor education elements conducive to spiritual development, and ethical considerations…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Educational Philosophy, Ethics, Foreign Countries
Young, Jeff – West Virginia University Alumni Magazine, 1997
A 26-day summer field course of West Virginia University's (WVU) Recreation and Parks Department took students to Malaysia's mountains and rainforests to observe how Malaysians are managing national parks, problem elephants, and population pressures on parks. The adventure provided powerful learning experiences. Further exchanges between WVU and…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, College Programs, College Students, Experiential Learning
Erskine, Rab – Horizons, 1998
Walk and Talk Experiences combine challenging outdoor experiences, group living, and opportunities for reflection and discussion to promote self-exploration and personal development. The British program has served various client groups, such as adolescents and people with disabilities or special needs. Activities on several weekends are described.…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, At Risk Persons, Experiential Learning, Foreign Countries
Ringer, Martin – Scisco Conscientia, 1999
Current views on leadership and leadership competencies overlook nonrational and unconscious aspects of human functioning. Six perspectives on group work leadership are presented, with suggestions for competencies derived from the fields of systems thinking and psychodynamic psychology. Outdoor leaders could benefit from developing their intuition…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Corporate Education, Experiential Learning, Group Dynamics

Priest, Simon – Journal of Experiential Education, 1996
For 72 new workers in a British automotive corporation, self-confidence was enhanced by participation in a ropes course. While general debriefing (addressing a wide variety of human behaviors) and specific debriefing (centered solely on self-confidence) contributed to these improvements, the benefits that accrued from specific debriefing were…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Attitude Change, Corporate Education, Employee Attitudes