Spelling suggestions: "subject:"outdoor education -- british columbia"" "subject:"outdoor education -- british kolumbia""
1 |
Experiencing freefall: a journey of pedagogical possibilitiesHaskell, Johnna Gayle 05 1900 (has links)
Experiencing Freefall is an inquiry into outdoor experiencing. It focuses on both my
experiences with a group of Grade 10 students in an outdoor adventure education program
and my personal experiencing of the outdoors. I explore the awareness we embody within
moments of unexpected happenings while negotiating Whitewater rapids or searching for a
handhold while clinging to the side of a cliff face. Also in this thesis I explore the
'phenomena of experiencing' which emerges out of our actions and interactions within
outdoor activities. The challenge of this dissertation is capturing in prose, the phenomena of
experiencing and 'embodied awareness' arising through such unexpected instances. Hence,
the thesis, in trying to articulate the complexity of experiencing in the outdoors, uses stories,
poetry and the metaphor of life, breath, and mountaineering to invite the reader on a journey
of inquiry. This thesis escorts the reader, like a true pedagogue, into an outdoor environment
of experiencing that opens the reader to ponder pedagogical possibilities.
I explore several themes in the thesis which include 'freefall,' community, 'turning points,'
and 'embodied respect' using a methodology of 'enactive inquiry.' The thesis takes a journey
through each theme by weaving students' stories from the study, my own personal stories of
the unexpected, and the theory of enaction.
The thesis creates an opportunity for readers to embrace their own struggles, fears, and
inquiry. Through the use of outdoor stories to illustrate moments of freefall into the
unfamiliar or unknown, we may imagine pedagogical possibilities. As an enactive inquiry,
this research thesis embodies an "education" or way of being, living, experiencing that
explores unexpected happenings. In articulating an ecological perspective of experiencing,
the thesis juxtaposes encounters in the outdoors with enactive theory to move beyond
traditional representationalist models of cognition.
Specifically, I focus on the embodied awareness that arises through phenomena of
experiencing and its relation to pedagogy. The thesis contributes to the theory of the enactive
approach by bringing examples of human experience which unfold, not only our interactions
within the ecological web of the outdoor world, but an emergent space of pedagogical
possibilities. As such, this thesis is an experiential work through which the reader may realize
their own interpreting of possible pedagogies for many educational contexts.
|
2 |
Experiencing freefall: a journey of pedagogical possibilitiesHaskell, Johnna Gayle 05 1900 (has links)
Experiencing Freefall is an inquiry into outdoor experiencing. It focuses on both my
experiences with a group of Grade 10 students in an outdoor adventure education program
and my personal experiencing of the outdoors. I explore the awareness we embody within
moments of unexpected happenings while negotiating Whitewater rapids or searching for a
handhold while clinging to the side of a cliff face. Also in this thesis I explore the
'phenomena of experiencing' which emerges out of our actions and interactions within
outdoor activities. The challenge of this dissertation is capturing in prose, the phenomena of
experiencing and 'embodied awareness' arising through such unexpected instances. Hence,
the thesis, in trying to articulate the complexity of experiencing in the outdoors, uses stories,
poetry and the metaphor of life, breath, and mountaineering to invite the reader on a journey
of inquiry. This thesis escorts the reader, like a true pedagogue, into an outdoor environment
of experiencing that opens the reader to ponder pedagogical possibilities.
I explore several themes in the thesis which include 'freefall,' community, 'turning points,'
and 'embodied respect' using a methodology of 'enactive inquiry.' The thesis takes a journey
through each theme by weaving students' stories from the study, my own personal stories of
the unexpected, and the theory of enaction.
The thesis creates an opportunity for readers to embrace their own struggles, fears, and
inquiry. Through the use of outdoor stories to illustrate moments of freefall into the
unfamiliar or unknown, we may imagine pedagogical possibilities. As an enactive inquiry,
this research thesis embodies an "education" or way of being, living, experiencing that
explores unexpected happenings. In articulating an ecological perspective of experiencing,
the thesis juxtaposes encounters in the outdoors with enactive theory to move beyond
traditional representationalist models of cognition.
Specifically, I focus on the embodied awareness that arises through phenomena of
experiencing and its relation to pedagogy. The thesis contributes to the theory of the enactive
approach by bringing examples of human experience which unfold, not only our interactions
within the ecological web of the outdoor world, but an emergent space of pedagogical
possibilities. As such, this thesis is an experiential work through which the reader may realize
their own interpreting of possible pedagogies for many educational contexts. / Education, Faculty of / Curriculum and Pedagogy (EDCP), Department of / Graduate
|
3 |
Bridges and barriers to offering outdoor education to grade 4-7 students in schoolsSanderson, Arthur Owen 05 1900 (has links)
This study investigated the bridges (enabling factors) and the barriers (hindering factors)
of offering school-based Outdoor Education programmes. A questionnaire was used to
survey 120 grade 4-7 classroom teachers. Teachers were required to record their
perceptions pertaining to the bridges and barriers of Outdoor Education programmes on
an 11-point scale. Open-ended responses also provided insights about the barriers and
bridges, as well as how Outdoor Education programmes could be supported in school
settings. Data suggested Outdoor Education is indeed offered in many schools but often
only to a limited degree. Interestingly, the identified barriers tended to be of an
organisational nature, whereas the bridges tended to be more closely aligned to
pedagogical interests. Time, costs and legal liability were perceived by teachers as the
strongest barriers to offering Outdoor Education. The strongest bridges were related to
student learning, other educational stakeholders and the availability of outdoor areas.
These research findings provide guidance for policy, professional development and other
means of supporting elementary teachers' efforts to offer Outdoor Education.
Methodological guidance is also offered for further research along similar lines. / Education, Faculty of / Curriculum and Pedagogy (EDCP), Department of / Graduate
|
Page generated in 0.1129 seconds