Many
business’s send work colleagues out on adventure programmes in the hope that
when they come back to the work place they work better together, a more
cohesive team you could say. But do the skills they have learnt in the outdoors
are they transferable in the work place? Not only the work place but students
also, what they learn in the outdoors is this transferable in the classroom?
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| Can i transfer this skill to this situation let me look |
There are a
number of definitions for transfer Thorndike and Woodworth, (1901) state that
soft skill transfer or the transfer of learning is the transfer of skills from
one context to another. Transfer in an outdoor setting is known as the
integration of learning from the learning from the adventure programme into the
participant’s real life Priest and Gass (1997)
Priest and Gass
(1997) state that Transfer can take place in three differ ways.
1. Specific - An individual learning
skills that can be transferred into another setting
2. Nonspecific - Learning which can then
be applied to differed situations
3. Metaphoric - A certain activity an
individual has to face which is out of the norm for an individual but there are
underling skill that are similar to everyday tasks
However the
research to validate Priest and Gass (1997) work is somewhat lacking. I have
obviously adopted soft skills, but I myself have never actually taken part in
workplace training or an adventure programme as I have still been in
education. I have obviously been facilitating adventure week programmes but I
doubt that a week is going to have any major effects. I feel a longer period of
time within a programme would aid the transfer. I am rather annoyed I did not
in fact think about this transfer of learning when I was on placement, as my
placement provides a one month programme for trident school. I believe a follow
up on the students that took part in that adventure programme would be highly
beneficial to see if transfer did occur into their everyday life. As Sibthorps
and Furman 2010 in fact reviewed a 14 day backpacking programme 3 months after
the course they found that there was an improvement in the interaction between
the groups and the way that they applied themselves and skills to their school
work. Also other work by Rhodes & Martin (2014) found that after a 6-12 day programme
that 4 months after participants were able to deal with challenging tasks and
were positive thinking. Reports from participants also stated that there was
positive impact on home life. Colleagues were also expressed that participants
who underwent the programme noticed that they were more positive and understood
others better.
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| Learning to abseil someone of a rock will this transfer to everyday life? |
References:
Priest, S.
and Gass, M.A. (1997). Effective Leadership in Adventure Programming.
Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics.
Rhodes, H.
M., & Martin, A. J. (2014). Behavior Change After Adventure Education
Courses: Do Work Colleagues Notice?. Journal of Experiential Learning,
265-284.
Sibthorp,
J., Furman, N., Paisley, K., Gookin, J., & Schumann, S. (2011). Mechanisms
of Learning Transfer in Adventure Education: Qualitative results from the NOLS
transfer survey. Journal of Experiential Learning, 109-126.
Thorndike,
E.L. and Woodworth, R.S. (1901). The influence of improvements in one mental
function upon the efficiency of other functions. Psychological Review 8, pp.
247-261.








