"Experiential learning is an evolving form of education that fundamentally involves "learning by doing" and having the students reflect on the work. The book discusses these recent developments pertaining to the use of experiential learning in engineering education. A broad readership will find value in this book, including faculty who teach undergraduate engineering courses, engineering education researchers, industry partners that provide co-op experience, and developers of training modules for practicing engineers. The book covers a range of innovations in experiential learning: development in laboratories, in-class and problem-based learning, and project work"--
"The Handbook of Experiential Learning In International Business is a one-stop source for international managers, business educators and trainers who seek to either select and use an existing experiential learning project, or develop new projects and exercises of this kind. The book is divided in two parts: Part I: Theories and Concepts of Experiential Learning in IB/IM.Part II: Examples of Experiential Learning Projects in IB/IM. The first part is dedicated to chapters dealing with conceptual and theoretical approaches to enhancing teaching and learning of International Business (IB) and International Management (IM) by the means of experiential learning, and foundational aspects of pedagogy and experiential learning. The second part contains specific applications of experiential learning in IB and IM. Each chapter in this section describes in detail one experiential learning project (e.g., X-Culture, Global Enterprise Experience, Export Odyssey, any other experiential projects which are used in IB and IM teaching)"--
Part 1. International Experiences -- 1. Learning Geography in the Andes: Reflections on Teaching an Undergraduate Field Study Course in Peru (Erika N. Trigoso Rubio) -- 2. For Peat's Sake: An Experiential Environmental Study Abroad Trip to Scotland (Adrienne Cassel and Jacqueline Housel) -- 3. Experiential Learning in Nairobi, Kenya (Ellen R. Hansen) -- 4. Study Abroad in an Embedded Online Geography Class for Adult Working Professionals (Beth King and Fritz Kessler ) -- 5. Encountering Emotions During International Fieldwork: using Innovative Pedagogies to Develop Emotional Intelligence and Resilience (Alan Marvell & David Simm) -- 6. Experiencing Iceland: Immersive Professional Development to Build Geography Teaching Capacity (Ellen J. Foster, Dawna Cerney, Lynn Moorman, Niccole Villa Cerveny, and Dianna Gielstra) -- Part 2. Domestic Experiences) -- 7. Experiential Learning in Geography Teacher Education: Encountering Geography in the Immediate Environment (Susan Pike) -- 8. The Isle of Rum, Scotland: a Physical Geography Fieldtrip for Second Year Undergraduates Studying Outdoor Environment, Education and/or Leadership. (Mansfield L) -- 9. Service-learning and Geospatial Skills: What do the Students Think? (Lisa Tabor) -- 10. Intercultural Experiential Learning: Integrated Geography Field Courses for Undergraduates in Arts and Humanities in Spain (Andrea M. Arboleya and Benjamín González-Díaz ) -- 11. Encounters in Geography Field-based Teaching and Learning: Wales (Dr Eifiona Thomas Lane, Rebecca Jones, Dr Will Andrews) -- 12. Learning at Disney: Myth or Magic? (Lorri K. Krebs) -- 13. Digital Storytelling as Community-Based Intercultural Learning in Cultural/Historical Geography (Dr. David J. Marshall).
The seven executive training exercises in tourism in this e-book form an important step towards developing a library of executive training exercises with solutions in tourism management. While in real-life problems and opportunities do not come with an explicit list of options to select from, the view adopted in developing these training exercises is that creating tourism management stories describing dilemmas with explicit options is a useful learning method located between lecturing and learning from case study without explicit options. The novice benefits from considering a list of explicit options- learning to think beyond making a go versus no-go decision in regard to one option-and learns that creating a list of four plus options increases the likelihood of crafting an exceptional solution.
This topical new book provides an illuminating overview of enterprise education, and poses the question as to whether current establishments have adequate systems in place to prepare students for the world of work. Addressing the increasing need for graduates with practical skills and expertise in the labour market, this collection of insightful chapters analyses the opportunities that are available for aspiring entrepreneurs to develop enterprise skills and experience key aspects of starting and running a business, whilst in a supported environment such as an educational program or incubator scheme. With comprehensive discussion of higher education initiatives and empirical examples of experiential learning in the workplace, this book is an important and timely read for those researching business enterprise, entrepreneurship and higher education more generally.
This book describes a series of ground-breaking residential workshops in therapeutic counselling in the 1960s, for people working in mental health and social care disciplines seeking to expand and deepen their reach. The work is unique in the scope of its research into the process and outcomes of such active immersive enquiry in this area. Besides a wealth of more systematic features, the author invites us into the initial conversations in the meeting room, and then follows the group members back into their lives, allowing us to see both early outcomes and the impact of participation up to ten years later. Finally, Barrett-Lennard reflects on the extended history of the intensive workshops and the related group work in other contexts they led into. He makes a compelling argument that such an intensive participatory process is as powerful today as it was in the 1960s. The blend of rich qualitative and empirical data and theory is a unique strength. It will be a great resource for students and scholars in applied psychology and psychotherapy, as well as for practicing therapists and trainees committed to meaningful work with their client groups.