Abstract

Two decades ago, McKenzie’s meta-analysis of literature provided six fundamental elements of adventure education programme design still used to guide research and practice today. While the value of McKenzie’s early work should not be underestimated, adventure education has undergone considerable changes. Adventurous activities are now available in urban and indoor contexts and used to facilitate a growing health and wellbeing agenda. The use of risk as part of adventure education programming has also been critiqued. This paper reflects on contemporary notions of adventure, risk and the emergent narratives emphasising the associated psychological benefits. The Ecological Dynamics framework, along with representative design delivery, are presented as a viable way of building on McKenzie’s work. Both consider how effective outcomes in adventure education programmes are achieved through designs that focus on the unique relationship between the individual and their environment. While McKenzie’s six elements recognise the importance of human relationships, Ecological Dynamics forefronts relational elements, not just between participants but, importantly, the task and the environment. Individual participant needs in relation to their everyday life therefore become the focus of adventure education expanding beyond the traditional long-standing narratives of risk and danger. Through these two important concepts, this paper advocates an approach to the design of adventure representative of a participant’s everyday environment. In this way, adventure education outcomes translate beyond the adventure-specific context and align more holistically with the needs of individual participants while also assuring emphasis on individual health and wellbeing.

Highlights

  • At the turn of this century, a meta-analysis of outdoor literature by McKenzie [1] succinctly captured six elements of adventure education programming (AEP) design that contribute to achieving programme outcomes

  • We explore how the Ecological Dynamics (ED) framework is ideally suited to guide effective AEP design, because it supports the idea that knowledge and behaviour emerge from the interactive relationship between an individual and the environment

  • This paper represents the first tentative steps in considering what happens when students embark on an adventure education programme using an ED approach

Read more

Summary

Introduction

At the turn of this century, a meta-analysis of outdoor literature by McKenzie [1] succinctly captured six elements of adventure education programming (AEP) design that contribute to achieving programme outcomes These elements were: the physical environment, activities, processing, the group, the instructor and the participants. Contemporary design is rethinking the value of the human-nature relationship and the impact of AEP on health and wellbeing [3,18,19,20,21,22] These transformations add to the notion that focusing on risk in AEP might be outdated, and the risk focus which underpins the six elements highlighted by McKenzie requires rethinking. A sharp distinction must be drawn between what McKenzie sees as the importance of human relationships within AEP (participant, group and instructor, for example) and EDs emphasis on the relational, per se, which embraces the human but extends to relational elements of environment and task

The Physical Environment
Activities
Processing
The Group
Instructors
The Participant
The Six AEP Elements in Context
Building on the Foundations of McKenzie’s Work
Ecological Dynamics
Representative Design
Constraints
Affordances
Perception and Action Coupling
AEP Design Using the Ecological Dynamics Lens
Capitalising on the Individual-Environment Relationship
Responding to Individual Needs
Moving away from Instructor Focused Activity
Academic Focus
Wellbeing Outcomes
Practical Considerations
Real Reflection and Transfer of Learning
Critical Evaluation
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call