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A Pedagogy for a Changing World Simon Beames and Mike Brown Routledge 2016.

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Presentation on theme: "A Pedagogy for a Changing World Simon Beames and Mike Brown Routledge 2016."— Presentation transcript:

1 A Pedagogy for a Changing World Simon Beames and Mike Brown Routledge 2016

2 Those who remain in calm waters will never get strong

3  Outdoor Education in NZ is at a cross-roads open to interpretation  “Outdoor Education” is open to interpretation lack ‘formal’ training –  Outdoor Educators often lack ‘formal’ training – this is changing  Limited research  Limited research in NZ to support the content of many programmes International  Founded in International Outdoor programmes and movements  Lack of ‘trickle down’  Lack of ‘trickle down’ of current academic thinking to teachers ‘on the floor’

4 A new wave? ‘home-grown’ programmes a move towards ‘home-grown’ programmes Sustainability Sustainability in the Outdoor Curriculum culturally responsive pedagogies Increasing need for a culturally responsive pedagogies “place” A move towards an identification with “place” authentically Aotearoa New Zealand Outdoor Education Culture towards an authentically Aotearoa New Zealand Outdoor Education Culture

5 A Pedagogy for a Changing World Simon Beames and Mike Brown Routledge 2016

6 Simon Beames  Senior Lecurer Edinburgh University  Senior Lecurer in Outdoor Learning, Edinburgh University  25 years teaching outdoors in North America, Asia, and Europe Outdoor Journeys  developed the Outdoor Journeys programme - a cross-curricular, local outdoor learning initiative Mike Brown  Senior Lecturer, Waikato university  Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Education, Waikato university place-responsive pedagogy  areas of interest relate to place-responsive pedagogy, learning theories in outdoor education and more recently human relationships with sea.

7 potential benefits outdoor adventure education restricted marginalised meaningful student learning “…the potential benefits of mainstream education and outdoor adventure education have been increasingly restricted and marginalised to a point where neither offers a strong platform for meaningful student learning”

8  Massive social change  Massive social change has influenced Education, Teaching and Learning.  Industrial model  Industrial model of education  Economic rationalisation  Economic rationalisation; “McDonaldization” and “Disneyization”  One size fits all  One size fits all model of education

9 Liquid times  “late modernity”, “post modernity”, “Liquid times”  Fast paced lifestyles,  cosmopolitanism,  global movement,  constantly evolving technology  Diminishing “Grand narrative” risk averse  Insulation from harm; “risk averse” culture  Uncertainty  Complexity  Neoliberalism

10 creative solutionscomplex problems  The challenge of our era is to find creative solutions to complex problems  How can “adventure” enhance teaching practices?  “Adventurous Learning” is a pedagogy for the modern world.

11  The meaning of “adventure” is subjective and fluid, with many definitions  adventure contains a degree of uncertainty and risk  Individual perceptions of adventure  “embodied engagement”  Flow, True adventure  Problematic from an educational perspective

12 Comfort Zone  “Comfort Zone” Model of personal development  Expert driven  Expert driven – safety management is a key aspect of outdoor experiences. Decontextualised  “Decontextualised activity based” educational experiences (Brown 2007)  Commodified  Commodified activity transfer of learning  Assumed transfer of learning from outdoor contexts into daily life

13 Four key elements of adventurous learning:  Authenticity  Agency  Uncertainty  Mastery

14  John Dewey (1859-1952)  prepare students to be active citizens in a democratic society  Interaction  Continuity  Contextualised learning - Real world contexts  Transference?  Place and community  Storied places  Community service

15  Learner autonomy  Active participation  Self determination  Intrinsic motivation  Supportive environment  Fostering Relevance  Working towards competence  Ownership and responsibility “The capability of individual human beings to make choices and act on these choices in a way that makes a difference in their lives” (Martin 2004)

16  Cornerstone concept in “Adventure”  solution thinking  Experimentation  creativity  Intelligent deliberation  holistic  Cross-fertilisation  Time to deliberate “We must educate young people … to live well in a world that is increasingly uncertain… this needs to be done through approaches to learning that embrace uncertainty ”

17 multiple courses of action  Allow for multiple courses of action, and no right answer deep reasoning  Complex issues or problems requiring deep reasoning (without overwhelming students)  Time and space  Time and space for intelligent deliberation  Uncertain outcome  Uncertain outcome – for educator and student alike

18  Challenge is personal  Influencd by  Background  Experience  Skills  Investment  Draws on existing skills  Appropriate progression “Challenge does not require the learner to accept unpleasant feelings of fear, uncertainty and discomfortand the need for luck”

19  Link between intrinsic enjoyment and challenge  Perception of skills and challenge are matched  Requires time to build sufficient skills for challenge  Incremental challenges  Scaffold experience  Learner driven challenge  Flow is difficult to create in the classroom!

20  4 dimensions  Use Axis to indicate how well your activity creates ideal learning conditions  Each dimension is a scale  Consider dimensions separately, but also as a whole Adventurous Learning Authenticity Agency Mastery Uncertainty

21  Identify where you could introduce Adventurous learning  Plot current activities on the Model  Look at how each dimension could be tweaked  Links with other pedagogies  Place responsiveness  Cultural Responsive  Integrated studies  Inquiry


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