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COLUMN: Adventure experiences sow seeds of learning

A s associate dean of science at Simon Fraser University, I've conducted thousands of experiments.

As associate dean of science at Simon Fraser University, I've conducted thousands of experiments. But nothing prepared me for my participation in the ultimate educational experiment: observing seven young people each run 180 km of Botswana's Kalahari Desert to better understand the value of water and its effect on human development and biodiversity. This was a rare experiential learning opportunity where students gained first-hand experience of the stark realities of a global issue and how it affects our world.

These students were participating in an impossible2Possible (i2P) youth expedition. A U.S.-based non-profit organization co-founded by Canadian Ray Zahab, i2P's mission is to encourage youth to reach beyond their perceived limits, and to use adventure as a medium to educate, inspire and empower the global community to make positive change.

With insightful contributions from others at SFU, I produced an inquiry-based curriculum for this expedition and travelled to Botswana to facilitate and support learning on the ground. The curriculum was also used in more than 125 schools worldwide and reached nearly 10,000 students, including hundreds in the Lower Mainland.

In these classrooms, students in Grades 6 to 12 conducted experiments exploring the value of water and its effect on human life, and interacted directly with the i2P participants via satellite video. This transported the expedition experience directly into the classroom and enabled students to engage in a manner that informed the next steps in their curriculum-based experiments.

Adventure-based learning uses physical challenges to help youth develop self-directed goals, trust, communication and problem-solving skills. Students and teachers report improved student engagement in and ownership of their learning; teamwork and leadership skills development; increased connection to the natural world; and a basic understanding of global issues and how they affect survival and daily life.

In the case of an i2P youth expedition, learning takes place in remote, harsh landscapes where global geo-political and environmental issues - such as water access, food security and health care - are explored. As a result, participants develop accountability and responsibility regarding the focal issue as well as a lifelong commitment to pursue solutions to it and related issues.

For example, in the drought-ridden Kalahari, access to clean water can mean the difference between life and death. To emphasize this, students ran a marathon a day in 40 C heat, consuming 8 l of clean water a day and cultivating a deep appreciation for easy accessibility to water in the process.

Taking adventure-based learning to the wider public has many challenges. Teachers implementing expedition-based concepts in a classroom often have their efforts stymied from a lack of context. Through technological advances, an expedition's curriculum can take on new meaning when students become participants in inquiry-based exercises of their own design, such as scientific experimentation, and are then empowered to discuss their results and obtain feedback in real-time with participants in the field.

Such experiential learning is one way to inspire student imagination, innovation and a deeper commitment to investigate in-depth issues from local to global perspectives.

Today, middle schools and high schools across the Lower Mainland are running adventure-based education programs. At Prince of Wales secondary school in Vancouver, the TREK program teaches students how the natural world impacts their daily lives and how they impact the environment. In Mission and Abbotsford, the community recreation programs at W.J. Mouat and Mission secondary schools introduce students to the role of exercise and nature in combating stress-related illness.

Often referred to as "21st century learning," adventure-based learning represents a new type of student experience. By leveraging technological tools to bring an expedition to life in classrooms, educators and students can engage with individuals and communities far afield and work together to find solutions to pressing global issues - issues that affect all of our lives profoundly. Such opportunities help engage students in shaping their futures by developing a knowledge base and value system that will shape and inform the rest of their lives.

George Agnes, a Coquitlam resident and associate dean of science at SFU recently joined seven young people in Botswana's parched Kalahari Desert to implement a curriculum exploring the value of water and its effect on human life.