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Cecil Hill Goodman – Journal of Experiential Education, 2024
Background: Research in outdoor adventure education (OAE) and related fields has argued that OAE programming can problematically reproduce dominant ways of being around patriarchy and whiteness. In particular, scholars have forwarded specific critiques of sense of place (SOP) in OAE or related fields. Purpose: This article investigated and…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Racism, Colonialism, Place Based Education
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Simon Priest – Journal of Outdoor and Environmental Education, 2024
This essay presents a theoretical model for the heretofore hidden processes associated with mechanisms of change in adventurous outdoor learning. After summarizing the few researchers who have investigated the components and pathways that bring participant change, four strands of influence are discussed: exercise activity, nature immersion,…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Outdoor Education, Educational Change, Exercise
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Heather E. Prince; Erin Annison – Sport, Education and Society, 2025
Menstruation impacts participation in adventurous activities but there are gaps in reported research on the views and perspectives of men. This study examines the ways in which people who menstruate (inclusive of the LGBTQIA+ community) perceive and report attitudes to menstruation and the menstrual cycle by men, and the ways in which cis-males…
Descriptors: Males, Females, Physiology, Outdoor Education
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Mike Brown – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2024
Sail training is described as an educational endeavour where participants are required to adapt to an unfamiliar physical and social environment, acquire new skills (maritime and domestic), and confront personal challenges (e.g. going aloft, dealing with seasickness). It shares many of the philosophical underpinnings of adventure education, where…
Descriptors: Aquatic Sports, Adventure Education, Barriers, Motivation
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A. Gigli; G. Melotti; C. Borelli; M. Galiazzo; N. Segato; G. Finocchiaro – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2025
This paper presents a new integrated model for documentation and evaluation tested in 2021 on Back Into the Wild project, an Adventure Education project by Equilibero Association (Padova-Treviso, Italy). The project proposes educational walks to groups of at-risk adolescents to promote their psychophysical and relational well-being. Due to the…
Descriptors: Outdoor Education, Adventure Education, Adolescents, Program Evaluation
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Charlotte Skau Pawlowski; Anne Vibild Lammert; Jasper Schipperijn; Mette Toftager – Journal of Motor Learning and Development, 2024
Environmental characteristics of kindergartens are important for the development of kindergarten-aged children. However, knowledge of the role of kindergarten play environments in developing children's fundamental movement skills is limited. A pilot study was carried out to compare the fundamental movement skills of 3.5- to 5-year-old children in…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Motor Development, Movement Education, Outdoor Education
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Benjamin C. Ingman – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2025
Adventure education (AE) has long been celebrated for its unique contributions to learning and personal growth. But the benefits of the AE experience may be broader than these outcomes and we are best positioned to uncover these benefits through employing new lenses in our analysis of AE. A qualitative study of the AE experience was completed at…
Descriptors: Well Being, Positive Attitudes, Adventure Education, Outdoor Education
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Soumya Mitra; Vinathe Sharma-Brymer; Denise Mitten; Janet Ady – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2025
Using a descriptive, exploratory study of recent developments in outdoor adventure education (OAE) fields in India, the authors report on the significant contributions of Indian OAE practitioners in promoting healthy human-nature relationships. Semi-structured interviews with Indian OAE practitioners revealed an underlying interconnectedness…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Outdoor Education, Well Being, Adventure Education
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Jonah D'Angelo; Stephen Ritchie; Simon Priest; Bruce Oddson; Daniel B. Scott – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2025
Outdoor programs have shown holistic health benefits for participants, with recent evidence indicating that these benefits can extend long after the conclusion of the program. The methods employed in retrospective studies exploring these outcomes are diverse, leading to many different approaches. Furthermore, only a few studies reference a…
Descriptors: Outdoor Education, Adventure Education, Physical Health, Mental Health
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Chris North; David Hills; Pat Maher; Jelena Farkic; Vinicius Zeilmann; Sue Waite; Takako Takano; Heather Prince; Kirsti Pedersen Gurholt; Nkatha Muthomi; Daniel Njenga; Te Hurinui Karaka-Clarke; Susan Houge Mackenzie; Graham French – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2024
This is a composite article which brings together the international perspectives of the editorial board of the Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning to explore the impacts of artificial intelligence (AI) on the field of adventure education and outdoor learning (AE/OL). Building on the AE/OL profession's response to the impacts of…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Technology Uses in Education, Adventure Education, Outdoor Education
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James MacAllister – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2024
In this paper, I consider the ethics education potential of two documentary films set in the mountains. I first draw upon the work of Emily Brady in order to tease out some similarities and differences between environmental tragedy and sublime experiences in nature. I secondly argue that the screened sublime is qualitatively different but not…
Descriptors: Films, Adventure Education, Ethics, Tragedy
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Benjamin C. Ingman – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2024
This work presents experiential criticism as a methodology for researching experience in education. The approach draws on elements of pragmatism, phenomenology, ethnography, and educational criticism and connoisseurship and was developed through a study of the adventure education experience. It is comprised of three modes of inquiry: (1)…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Criticism, Phenomenology, Ethnography
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Claudio D. Rosa; Talisson Santos Chaves; Silvia Collado; Nevin J. Harper – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2024
Nature-based adventure (NBA) interventions can be broadly understood as any intervention of adventure occurring in a natural setting not necessarily involving a licensed mental health professional. Evidence suggests that some NBA interventions improve people's health. Although encouraging, the strength of this evidence is often impaired by the…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Outdoor Education, Adventure Education, Intervention
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Jenny Renlund; Kristiina Kumpulainen; Jenny Byman; Chin Chin Wong; Sara Sintonen – Environmental Education Research, 2024
Although sensuous and embodied engagement is an integral part of child--environment relationalities, the intersections of aesthetics, children and environments remain scarcely addressed. As a response, this study develops a concept of 'aesthetic flux' to delve into the sensuous dynamics of matter and bodies in the context of a storying workshop in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Students, Grade 1, Environmental Education
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Nathan L. Moody; Brant G. Miller; Robert Justin Hougham – Journal of Experiential Education, 2024
Background: Outdoor Adventure Education (OAE) predominantly centers learning around individual goal setting and experiences and has not traditionally elevated Indigenous Knowledge Systems (IKS). Purpose: This research focuses on understanding how student learning and inquiry is affected through OAE that emphasizes the importance of IKS as a…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, College Freshmen, Adventure Education, Summer Programs
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