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Smith, Mary – 1973
With 7 adult sponsors, 40 students from 4 Massachusetts high schools participated in a successful 3-week-long summer trip in Maine. Intended to provide students with realistic challenges to help them gain a sense of pride and accomplishment, the program took one group of students down a Maine river and the other group on an 800-mile bicycle trip…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Behavior Change, Bicycling, Canoeing
Hale, Alan N., Ed. – 1975
Nearly 200 ongoing educational programs using outdoor adventure as a learning device are listed in this 1975 directory. The program listings, including a broad cross section of outdoor education adventure programs, give the name of each program, program director, address, and phone number, along with a brief description of activities, length of…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Costs, Directories, Disabilities
Kimball, Richard Owen – 1980
Over 80 wilderness/adventure programs have emerged as a valuable alternative to traditional treatment for juvenile offenders, especially in combination with other services. Participants are referred from many points in the juvenile justice system by agents who should have a thorough understanding of wilderness programs so as to prepare the…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Adventure Education, Behavior Change, Cost Effectiveness
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Donnan, Graeme E. – Journal of Experiential Education, 1985
Describes the outdoor/experiential learning curriculum of the International School Moshi in Tanzania which is inspired by the geographical and environmental features of the region (Mount Kilimanjaro, Serengeti Plains). Includes the objectives, organizational and attitudinal problems, and benefits of the program. (NEC)
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Environmental Education, Experiential Learning, Field Experience Programs
Loeffler, T. A. – 1996
A common assumption in the outdoor field has been that women's development as outdoor leaders has not kept pace with their participation in outdoor adventure activities. A survey about women's employment was mailed to 103 outdoor education programs with an adventure component; 62 responded. The programs served 160,585 participants in 1994, of…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Adventure Education, Employed Women, Employment Level
Berger, Cheryl; Vollbracht, Christy – 1997
A female trip leader in the University of Florida's Travel and Recreation Program observed that women and men approached outdoor experiences differently, and suggested a women-only program. From this came the Women in the Wilderness program, a women-only outdoor education program designed to empower women through participation in adventure…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, College Programs, Discussion Groups, Empowerment
Paxton, Todd; McAvoy, Leo – 1998
A study examined the effect of adventure programs on participants' self-efficacy immediately following an adventure program experience and whether increased self-efficacy transferred to the participants' daily lives after the adventure experience. Sixty-eight participants aged 18-29 in a series of 21-day Outward Bound courses were given a pretest…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Individual Development, Interpersonal Competence, Locus of Control
Hagler, Steve – 1998
The Galileo Outdoor Adventures Program (GOAPe) addresses the needs of high school students with a student-centered experiential program that is project- and community-based. At the Galileo Academy of Science and Technology, a public school in inner-city San Francisco, GOAPe is a semester-long program and a student club. From the first day of…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Experiential Learning, High Schools, Integrated Curriculum
Yerkes, Rita – Outdoor Communicator, 1982
Describes Towson State University's (Baltimore, Maryland) "WIN--Women in Nature Program," then makes suggestions for other programs which include course offerings for females: use role models to encourage adventure; hire and train program staff with care; provide quality equipment; utilize public relations; encourage participant…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Continuing Education, Females, Friendship
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Williams, Robert; Sherwood, Elizabeth – School Science and Mathematics, 1982
Activity topics suggested were selected from the many areas of study which can be drawn from the outdoor school environment: See That Tree; Time Passing; Critters; and Digging in the Dirt. The ideas shared are intended as a beginning on which teachers and children can build. (MP)
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Basic Skills, Early Childhood Education, Elementary Education
Ewert, Alan – Communicator, 1979
The key to a successful program in a cold environment lies in dealing with the cold while still accomplishing program goals and objectives. Teachers and students must be aware of physiological and psychological reactions to the cold, cold injuries and their treatment, and techniques for staying warm. (SB)
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Affective Objectives, Conditioning, Educational Planning
Warrington, Georgina; Wright, Paul – Youth Studies Australia, 2003
Four models of crime prevention are discussed that arise from differing views of the causes of crime: criminal justice, situational, developmental, and social development models. Two activity-based youth crime prevention projects in Queensland (Australia) use developmental and social development models and expand local youth service…
Descriptors: Aboriginal Australians, Adventure Education, After School Programs, Crime Prevention
Gordon, Sandy; And Others – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Leadership, 1996
Pre- and postvoyage interviews with seven participants on a 10-day adventure trip aboard the sail training ship Leeuwin revealed that the experience met the expectations of most participants and that participants experienced increases in self-confidence, self-esteem, motivation, and tolerance. Suggests that prevoyage briefing, postvoyage…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, At Risk Persons, Case Studies, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Maxwell, Jon – Journal of Experiential Education, 1997
Discusses the goals of team building, scope of team-building interventions, and specific contributions of both experiential (corporate adventure training) and nonexperiential (traditional) methods for increasing work-group effectiveness. A model for effectively combining the two approaches involves establishing goals, clarifying team members'…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Cooperation, Corporate Education, Experiential Learning
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Raiola, Ed – Journal of Experiential Education, 2003
A communication and problem-solving model is presented for individuals who lead extended field-based courses. The model focuses on the positive aspects of a situation and on encouraging individuals to accept responsibility for their behavioral choices. The four steps in the model are establishing rapport, what needs to change, where are we going,…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Conflict Resolution, Educational Strategies, Group Dynamics
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