Rain and Romanticism: the environment in outdoor education

Type of content
Journal Article
Thesis discipline
Degree name
Publisher
Informa UK Limited
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Language
en
Date
2015
Authors
North, Chris
Abstract

Outdoor education provides an opportunity to engage with natural environments in ways that are distinct from other physical education teacher education (PETE) courses. This research examines how pre-service teachers (PSTs) within a PETE degree experienced ‘environment’ on an outdoor education camp. Using selfstudy methodology and drawing on responses of students and my reflections, I sought to interrogate my Romantic assumptions. A particularly rainy camp provided rich opportunities and PST responses to the weather were diverse, because the rain prompted environmental responsiveness in ways that would not have occurred in fine weather. PSTs generally valued the affordances of the outdoor setting which they saw as distinct from daily schooling. However, contrary experiences also emerged, problematising my Romantic framing of the environment and indicating that my approach was marginalising some students. Implications for teachers and teacher educators are discussed.

Description
Citation
North C (2015). Rain and Romanticism: the environment in outdoor education. Asia-Pacific Journal of Health, Sport & Physical Education. 6(3). 287-298.
Keywords
outdoor education, teacher education, environment, Romanticism, Self-study
Ngā upoko tukutuku/Māori subject headings
ANZSRC fields of research
39 - Education::3903 - Education systems::390307 - Teacher education and professional development of educators
39 - Education::3901 - Curriculum and pedagogy::390102 - Curriculum and pedagogy theory and development
39 - Education::3901 - Curriculum and pedagogy::390111 - Physical education and development curriculum and pedagogy
Rights
All rights reserved unless otherwise stated