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Showing 1 to 15 of 59 results
Vlamis, Ekaterini; Bell, Brent J.; Gass, Michael – Journal of Experiential Education, 2011
This study examined the effects of an adventure orientation program on the student development behaviors of incoming first-year students at Hartwick College in Oneonta, New York. Student development was measured by a condensed version of the Student Development Task Inventory-2 (CSDTI-2; Gass, 1986; Winston, Miller, & Prince, 1979). Data analysis…
Descriptors: Student Development, Adventure Education, Task Analysis, Developmental Tasks
Harper, Nevin J. – Journal of Experiential Education, 2010
Evidence-based practice is an approach that narrowly classifies research results by utilising a hierarchy of evidence. This process renders much available knowledge and experience redundant within its value structure. Currently a dominating ideology across medical and health fields, evidence-based practice is now being promoted in adventure…
Descriptors: Evidence, Adventure Education, Educational Research, Models
Gass, Michael A.; Gillis, H. L. – Journal of Experiential Education, 2010
Supervision of therapeutic practice is one of the central professional elements of mental health practitioners. Supervision provides growth for therapists in their respective professional fields, more effective therapy for clients, and some measure of ethical protection for the welfare of clients and the public at large. However, therapists who…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Supervision, Therapy, Experiential Learning
Frauman, Eric – Journal of Experiential Education, 2010
What do you do when your educational programs begin to lose some of their audience appeal? One tool to recapture your audience or simply to keep your existing ones engaged is introducing the mindfulness concept into your educational efforts. According to Langer (1989, 1997), mindfulness is expressed by actively processing information within one's…
Descriptors: Outdoor Education, Audiences, Environmental Education, Metacognition
Molee, Lenore M.; Henry, Mary E.; Sessa, Valerie I.; McKinney-Prupis, Erin R. – Journal of Experiential Education, 2010
The purpose of this study was to describe and examine a model for assessing student learning through reflection in service-learning courses. This model utilized a course-embedded process to frame, facilitate, support, and assess students' depth of learning and critical thinking. Student reflection products in two service-learning courses (a…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Reflection, Service Learning, Models
Thomas, Glyn – Journal of Experiential Education, 2010
A facilitator is commonly defined as a substantively neutral person who manages the group process in order to help groups achieve identified goals or purposes. However, outdoor educators rarely experience the luxury of only managing the group process, because they are typically responsible for the provision of leadership, skill instruction, and…
Descriptors: Outdoor Education, Foreign Countries, Teacher Role, Instructional Leadership
Shooter, Wynn; Sibthorp, Jim; Paisley, Karen – Journal of Experiential Education, 2009
Successful hiring, training, and pairing or grouping of staff requires administrators to consider the relationship between their programs' goals and the specific outdoor leadership skills of individual leaders. Authors have divided outdoor leadership skills into a three-category structure, and models of outdoor leadership have focused on skills…
Descriptors: Outdoor Leadership, Experiential Learning, Personnel Selection, Models
Uhlik, Kim Stephen – Journal of Experiential Education, 2009
Throughout time and across cultures, the relationship between Homosapiens and the natural environment has played a central role in identifying and defining aspects of the realm of spirituality, wherein humans seek to make sense of the universe and find meaning in their own existence. Within outdoor recreation and experiential education (OREE)…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Religious Factors, Leadership, Recreation
Ewert, Alan; Sibthorp, Jim – Journal of Experiential Education, 2009
There is an increasing interest in the field of experiential education to move beyond simply documenting the value of experiential education programs and, instead, develop more evidence-based models for experiential education practice (cf., Gass, 2005; Henderson, 2004). Due in part to the diversity of experiential education programs, participants,…
Descriptors: Outcomes of Education, Evidence, Models, Program Evaluation
Seaman, Jayson – Journal of Experiential Education, 2008
According to prevailing models, experiential learning is by definition a stepwise process beginning with direct experience, followed by reflection, followed by learning. It has been argued, however, that stepwise models inadequately explain the holistic learning processes that are central to learning from experience, and that they lack scientific…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Models, Criticism, Learning Processes
Galloway, Shayne – Journal of Experiential Education, 2007
Outdoor leaders function in naturalistic decision-making contexts and may be influenced by personal, social, and environmental factors in making critical decisions in the field. The experience level of the outdoor instructor is posited as a critical variable in the development of his/her decision-making and overall judgment. This research measures…
Descriptors: Predictor Variables, Decision Making, Outdoor Leadership, Models
Baldwin, Cheryl; Persing, John; Magnuson, Douglas – Journal of Experiential Education, 2004
Some of the present approaches for studying adventure education are based on grounded theory, folk pedagogies, and existing social science theory. These approaches share some problems, including: (a) an overemphasis on outcomes without specifying processes, (b) a misunderstanding of how different types of evaluation contribute to theory, and (c)…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Social Sciences, Educational Theories, Models
Beringer, Almut – Journal of Experiential Education, 2004
Many forms of adventure therapy, in particular wilderness therapy, rely on challenges in the outdoors to achieve objectives of client change. While nature is drawn on as a medium for therapy and healing, some adventure therapists give nature little if any mention when it comes to explaining therapeutic success. The dominant paradigm in psychology…
Descriptors: Models, Adventure Education, Psychotherapy, Physical Environment
Russell, Keith; Sibthorp, Jim – Journal of Experiential Education, 2004
Hierarchical linear modeling (HIM) is an approach used in data analysis to better understand how program outcomes are affected by the "nested" nature of data collected in many studies. An outcome can be considered variables such as an individual's self-efficacy, social skills, or more targeted outcomes such as demonstrated reading and mathematical…
Descriptors: Therapy, Data Analysis, Self Efficacy, Adventure Education
Diambra, Joel F.; Cole-Zakrzewski, Kylie G.; Booher, Josh – Journal of Experiential Education, 2004
Human service interns completing their four-year Bachelor of Science degree at the University of Tennessee participated in this study which focused on investigating student internship experiences from the perspective of three different internship stage models. the three models studied include those of Infester and Boss (1998), Sweitzer and King…
Descriptors: Internship Programs, Human Services, Models, Participant Satisfaction

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