As outdoor education has evolved in the decades since the 1950s, however, so too has its definition. In Adventure education: Some semantics, Lund (2002) says that outdoor education is “an experiential method of learning with the use of all senses. It takes place primarily, but not exclusively, through exposure to the natural environment. In outdoor education, the emphasis for the subject of learning is placed on relationships concerning people and natural resources.” Perhaps James Neill (2003) summed it up best, though: “Outdoor education is a term that means different things to different people, cultures, and organizations. Common themes include an emphasis on direct experience of the outdoors for personal, social, educational, therapeutic and environmental goals.” It would follow then, that if there are so many diverse definitions, there would also be several theories about why humans feel the need to facilitate and participate in outdoor education. James Neill, a Doctor of Philosophy, wrote a thesis entitled Enhancing Life Effectiveness: The Impacts of Outdoor Education Programs, Volume 1 in May of 2008, in which he outlines the five main areas the theories on outdoor education fall into: environmental, experiential, psycho-experiential, psychosocial, and multi-element (p40). Several theories fall within the first category, environmental, such as John Hattie’s Novel Environment, in which the study he and his team conducted in 1997 showed a marked increase of motivation and stimulation in people who participated in adventurous activities in new environments.
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