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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Audience
Teachers1
Showing 121 to 135 of 152 results
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Wurdinger, Scott; Paxton, Todd – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2003
Presents a model of four levels of experience in training adventure education leaders: direct instruction, student interaction in class, technical skill development, and internships. Internships allow students to think for themselves and solve real-world problems while experiencing teaching on their own. Utilizing all levels increases student…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Education Work Relationship, Educational Strategies, Experiential Learning
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Brookes, Andrew – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2003
"Neo-Hahnian" approaches to outdoor adventure education assume their programs "build character." Social psychology research has found that "character" is almost entirely illusory. Outdoor adventure education programs may provide situations that elicit certain behaviors, but the belief in character building must be seen as a source of bias, not…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Bias, Context Effect, Criticism
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Boyes, Michael A.; O'Hare, David – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2003
Decision making by outdoor adventure educators revolves around balancing risk and competence. A model of outdoor adventure decision making is presented that draws on naturalistic decision-making processes and emphasizes the importance of situational recognition and prior experience. Leaders draw key information from the natural environment,…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Case Studies, Context Effect, Decision Making
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Lugg, Alison; Slattery, Deirdre – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2003
A study examined the objectives of outdoor education teachers and park staff involved in secondary school visits to Victoria (Australia) national parks. Interviews with teachers and park staff, observations, and document analysis indicate that outdoor education teachers needed training in socially critical environmental education, ecology, and…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Educational Cooperation, Educational Needs, Educational Objectives
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Gillen, Mark C. – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2003
Adventure therapy and cognitive behavioral therapy share elements, including transformation of distorted thinking patterns, a focus on current and future functioning, consideration of the counselor-client relationship, and the use of stress in the change process. Recognizing cognitive behavioral therapy as an empirically sound theory underlying…
Descriptors: Adolescents, At Risk Persons, Behavior Change, Cognitive Restructuring
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Storry, Terry – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2003
This is a story of what happened on the Aiguille du Grepon. It is based on fact and designed to reveal both the appearance and reality of motivation in climbing, a combination that is often difficult to express in a traditional academic style. The story differentiates motivation along two dimensions, a goal dimension with intrinsic and extrinsic…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Motivation, Rewards, Foreign Countries
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Brookes, Andrew – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2003
In the first of a two part series of articles I argued that "character building" in outdoor adventure education (OAE) is a flawed concept. This, the second article, examines the persistence of the idea of character building in OAE in the face of strong evidence that outdoor experiences cannot change personal traits. I examine how the "fundamental…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Personality, Outdoor Education, Personality Traits
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Sibthorp, Jim – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2003
The purpose of this study is threefold: (a) to explore what 18 adolescents learned while participating in a three week long adventure program, (b) to examine how they learned while on the program, and (c) to determine what program outcomes they considered most applicable to their home environments, or which learning is "transferable". To address…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Adventure Education, Family Environment, Internet
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Stott, Tim; Hall, Neil – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2003
This investigation focuses on students' self-reported changes in personal, social and technical skills that took place during a six-week long expedition to East Greenland. A 105-item pre-and post-expedition questionnaire was completed by 60 young expeditioners aged 16 to 20. Before the expedition participants generally felt that they had high…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Student Attitudes, Physical Fitness, Hygiene
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Hovelynck, Johan; Peeters, Luk – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2003
This article inquires into the role of humor in the relational learning process that takes place in adventure education programs. It presents program episodes, which the authors experienced in their practice as facilitator, staff trainer and researcher, and explores the related literature. Four aspects appear to affect whether humor either…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Humor, Role, Learning Processes
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Nicol, Robbie – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2002
Traces the development of school-based outdoor and adventure education in Scotland, 1970s-90s, focusing on changes in terminology, shifting objectives and increased practitioner training in response to safety concerns, the growth of residential outdoor education centers, and financial and curricular issues related to national changes. Points out…
Descriptors: Decentralization, Educational Change, Educational Philosophy, Educational Practices
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Brown, Mike – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2002
An ethnomethodological approach was used to analyze the organization of talk, the leader-student interaction, and resultant social order during group discussion among 2 male leaders and 15 ninth-grade Australian boys participating in a school-sponsored outdoor experience. Results focus on how the leaders structured the interaction and regulated…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Discourse Analysis, Foreign Countries, Grade 9
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Loynes, Chris – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2002
The "algorithmic" model of outdoor experiential learning is based in military tradition and characterized by questionable scientific rationale, production line metaphor, and the notion of learning as marketable commodity. Alternatives are the moral paradigm; the ecological paradigm "friluftsliv"; and the emerging "generative" paradigm, which…
Descriptors: Criticism, Discovery Learning, Educational Philosophy, Experiential Learning
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Mathur, Atul – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2002
A practitioner providing experiential training programs in India reflects on models of training outcomes from the perspective of Indian philosophy about an individual's spiritual development. He suggests that development training programs serve their purpose if they can create moments of insight that might spark lasting change in participants. (SV)
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Experiential Learning, Foreign Countries, Individual Development
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Freeman, Patti A.; Zabriskie, Ramon B. – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2002
Two studies collected quantitative and qualitative data from 24 families participating in an 8-hour outdoor adventure program and from 11 families in a residential family camping program. Findings demonstrate a strong positive relationship between structured outdoor family programming and family strength, and suggest that adventure activities…
Descriptors: Family Attitudes, Family Programs, Family Relationship, Group Unity
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