Re: Histories of AEE, AORE, and WEA

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Histories of AEE, AORE, and WEA

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  • Because I have not seen this elsewhere in the forum, and I believe it to be an important topic, I would like to invite any and all to comment on the histories of the Association for Experiential Education, the Association of Outdoor Recreation Education, and the Wilderness Education Association.

     

    Why so many associations with arguably very similar missions?

     

    Thanks in advance for your input!

  • Levi,

    I have written a bit about this, I believe it is actually part of a larger trend of more and more (smaller and smaller) professional organizations across the US. If you are familiar with Robert Putnam's Bowling Alone, well we all may be (organizations in general) on the way to conferencing alone. Not to say there are not some great benefits to smaller conferences. The big loss is in the ability to create a powerful lobby for the interests of a field. If you believe Saul Alinsky's premise that power comes through either money or people, then small conferences may come at a cost of  power and promotion of the interests for Experiential Education.

    Still, we have conferences which people deeply enjoy and the personal connection does have great value. 

    I found over 60 organizations that are closely connected (experiential & outdoor ed. related or associated) in the US, and more if you include Canada. Many began well before AEE, AORE, and WEA.  

    Brent Bell
    Assistant Prof. of Outdoor Education
    Dept. of Kinesiology
    University of New Hampshire
    (603)862-3047





    Because I have not seen this elsewhere in the forum, and I believe it to be an important topic, I would like to invite any and all to comment on the histories of the Association for Experiential Education, the Association of Outdoor Recreation Education, and the Wilderness Education Association.

     

    Why so many associations with arguably very similar missions?

     

    Thanks in advance for your input!





    Brent Bell, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Outdoor Education University of New Hampshire Durham, NH 02824 bbell@unh.edu
  •  

     

    Given that I am now a serious “old fart” I can comment on the start of AEE (Association for Experiential Education)

     

    When I worked at the Colorado Outward Bound School (COBS) I was witness to the very beginnings of AEE in 1973. The first office was in the basement of the Colorado Outward Bound School at 945 Pennsylvania Avenue, Denver.

     

    Joe Nold as Director and later as President of COBS, provided critical financial support and free office space.  Maria Snyder was the first Executive Officer.

     

    It was an exciting time.

     

    In essence, AEE was set up with a strong adventure based experiential learning (ABEL) focus and continued with that focus for many years.  AEE was an affiliation of individuals and organisations.  It was the very beginning of the use of the word “experiential”.

     

    I was a member and active participant in AEE for many years.

     

    The second AEE conference was held at Estes Park, Rocky Mountain National Park near Boulder, Colorado in 1974.  It was strongly supported by the Colorado Outward Bound School.

     

    The Wilderness Education Association (WEA) started in the early 1970’s.  Paul Petzolt (who worked at Colorado Outward Bound School (COBS) early 1960’s prior to setting up National Outdoor Leadership School [NOLS] in Wyoming) was an early supporter.  Main focus was on leadership training in the early days.

     

     

    The Association of Outdoor Recreation Education, (AORE) , I suspect, has a different focus to AEE and WEA.  Outdoor Recreation and Outdoor Education are interpreted in different ways in various countries.  This subject requires considerable research to sort out those differences.

     

    So, in essence, I believe these associations have served separate communities but all in beneficial ways.

     

    Kind regards,

     

    Alistair McArthur

    Odyssey Consultants

    Melbourne

    Australia

    Born in 1941!!!

     

    ________________________________

    cc.

    ·          Joe Nold and Maria Snyder Weber

    ·          AEE Chief Executive Officer:  Paul Limoges,  executive@aee.org

    ·          AEE  President-Elect: Christian Itin, ci3@humboldt.edu  

     

    ________________________________

     


    From: General Forum [mailto:generalforum@outdoored.com] On Behalf Of Levi Wilner
    Sent: Thursday, 12 March 2009 11:21 AM
    To: a.mcarthur@c031.aone.net.au
    Subject: [General Forum] Histories of AEE, AORE, and WEA

     

    Because I have not seen this elsewhere in the forum, and I believe it to be an important topic, I would like to invite any and all to comment on the histories of the Association for Experiential Education, the Association of Outdoor Recreation Education, and the Wilderness Education Association.

     

    Why so many associations with arguably very similar missions?

     

    Thanks in advance for your input!



    Alistair McArthur
  • Levi, also check out Jay Roberts Blog on "Why We Need an Association Merger in Outdoor Education" http://www.outdoored.com/Community/blogs/jay_roberts/archive/2008/10/31/together-in-2012-why-we-need-an-association-merger-in-outdoor-experiential-education.aspx

     

    --------------- Rick Curtis CEO OutdoorEd.com Director, Princeton University Outdoor Action Program
  • Last fall, there was a meeting in Chicago hosted by ACCT (the Association for Challenge Course Technology) to address the issue of as many organizations as possible working together on issues that concern all of us. I personally am not of the opinion that a big merger is the answer, but that working together is. The idea is now that executive staff from the organizations present, plus any other that wants to join in, will work on carrying this idea further. 

    The 6 associations present at the meeting were the Association for Experiential Education (AEE), Professional Ropes Course Association (PRCA), Christian Adventure Association (CAA), American Camp Association (ACA), Association for Outdoor Recreation and Education (AORE) , and ACCT. Rick has set up an electronic meeting area for us on OutdoorEd.com to facilitate this work. 

    If you have suggestions about other organizations who should be in this mix, please send them to me offline at sylvia@acctinfo.org, or contact me if you want more information.

    Sylvia Dresser
    Executive Director, ACCT


    Levi,

    I have written a bit about this, I believe it is actually part of a larger trend of more and more (smaller and smaller) professional organizations across the US. If you are familiar with Robert Putnam's Bowling Alone, well we all may be (organizations in general) on the way to conferencing alone. Not to say there are not some great benefits to smaller conferences. The big loss is in the ability to create a powerful lobby for the interests of a field. If you believe Saul Alinsky's premise that power comes through either money or people, then small conferences may come at a cost of  power and promotion of the interests for Experiential Education.

    Still, we have conferences which people deeply enjoy and the personal connection does have great value. 

    I found over 60 organizations that are closely connected (experiential & outdoor ed. related or associated) in the US, and more if you include Canada. Many began well before AEE, AORE, and WEA.  

    Brent Bell
    Assistant Prof. of Outdoor Education
    Dept. of Kinesiology
    University of New Hampshire
    (603)862-3047




    On Mar 11, 2009, at 8:20 PM, Levi Wilner wrote:

    Because I have not seen this elsewhere in the forum, and I believe it to be an important topic, I would like to invite any and all to comment on the histories of the Association for Experiential Education, the Association of Outdoor Recreation Education, and the Wilderness Education Association.

     

    Why so many associations with arguably very similar missions?

     

    Thanks in advance for your input!










    Sylvia Dresser
    Executive Director
    Association for Challenge Course Technology
    496 Castlewood Lane
    Deerfield, IL 60015 USA
    Phone +1-847-945-0829
    Fax +1-847-317-0155

    ***Join us for our upcoming conference in Atlanta, Georgia, February 4-7,  2010. Visit www.acctinfo.org for conference information, membership, standards purchase and other information***

    The information contained in this email and any attachment(s) may be confidential, and is for the intended addressee(s) only. Please do not forward, copy or otherwise disseminate without permission from the sender. If you are not the intended addressee, please notify the sender immediately and delete this message.







    Sylvia Dresser Executive Director, Association for Challenge Course Technology 496 Castlewood Lane Deerfield, IL 60015 USA Phone: +1-847-945-0829 Fax +1-847-317-0155 sylvia@acctinfo.org www.acctinfo.org
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