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Association for Experiential Education (AEE): A community of progressive educators and practitioners.

JEE Issue List
Showing 1 to 100 of 857 items Page 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9       Prev | Next Next.
Issue    Title    Author    Book Review    Date Actions
Volume 9, Number 2 Youth-Adult Partnership Training Seminar. D. F. Mock, Kathryn Ramsey Chandross, Veta Sheppard-Hayes.   Summer, 1986 select
Volume 9, Number 2 Youth-Adult Connections on Boards and Committees. Kathe Thorpe.   Summer, 1986 select
Volume 9, Number 2 Youth Take the Lead: Cherokee Nation's Approach to Leadership. McClellan Hall, James Kielsmeier.   Summer, 1986 select
Volume 23, Number 3 World Religions, Spirituality and Experiential Education Karla A. Henderson   Winter, 2000 select
Volume 23, Number 3 Workshops: Designing and Facilitating Experiential Learning Reviewed by Steven Simpson Author(s): Jeff E. Brooks-Harris, Susan R. Stock-Ward Yes Winter, 2000 select
Volume 24, Number 3 Work in Progress: Facilitating the Human Side of Experience-Based Training Reviewed by Christy M. Marek Author: Jackie Gerstein Yes Winter, 2001 select
Volume 20, Number 1 Women's Voices in Experiential Education. (Book Review ) Reviewed by Jenny Davis-Berman Author: Karen Warren   May, 1997 select
Volume 8, Number 2 Women's Outdoor Adventures: Myth and Reality. Karen Warren.   Summer, 1985 select
Volume 20, Number 3 Women of Color in the Outdoors: Culture and Meaning Nina S. Roberts, Karla A. Henderson   December, 1997 select
Volume 19, Number 2 Wilma's Place: The Case for Organic Design. Jennie Barron   August 1996 select
Volume 10, Number 1 William James: An Ethical Philosopher for Experiential Education. Homer Page.   Spring, 1987 select
Volume 25, Number 1 Wilderness Writing: Using Personal Narrative to Enhance Outdoor Experience John Bennion, Burton Olsen   Spring, 2002 select
Volume 17, Number 3 Wilderness Therapy: Foundations, Theory and Research Reviewed by Michael J. Swiderski, Denise Mitten. Authors: Jenifer Davis-Berman, Dene S. Berman Yes December, 1994 select
Volume 18, Number 2 Wilderness Therapy for Women: The Power of Adventure Reviewed by Jennifer Davis-Berman Editor(s): Ellen Cole, Eve Erdman, Esther Rothblum Yes August 1995 select
Volume 29, Number 2 Wilderness Orientation: Exploring the Relationship Between College Preorientation Programs and Social Support Brent J. Bell   November, 2006 select
Volume 10, Number 3 Wilderness Medicine - What It Is and Why We Need It. Buck Tilton.   Fall, 1987 select
Volume 13, Number 3 Wilderness Keeping by Wilderness Educators. John C. Miles.   November, 1990 select
Volume 9, Number 3 Wilderness Food Planning in the Computer Age. Jack K. Drury.   Fall, 1986 select
Volume 10, Number 3 Wilderness as Healing Place. John Miles.   Fall, 1987 select
Volume 24, Number 1 Whose Choice Is It? Contemplating Challenge-by-Choice and Diverse-abilities Julie A. Carlson, Kirk Evans   Spring, 2001 select
Volume 15, Number 3 White Awareness and Our Responsibility to End Racism. Karen Fox   November, 1992 select
Volume 20, Number 3 Where Have We Been, Where Are We Going? Gender Issues in Experiential Education. Karen Warren   December, 1997 select
Volume 13, Number 1 Where are the Risk-Takers? Dave Talamo.   May, 1990 select
Volume 14, Number 3 When is a Metaphor not a Metaphor? Darl Kolb.   November, 1991 select
Volume 23, Number 1 What's in a Good Life? Searching for Ethical Wisdom in the Wilderness Baylor L. Johnson, Laura M. Fredrickson   June, 2000 select
Volume 5, Number 1 What Means This Experience? Alan R. Drengson.   Spring, 1982 select
Volume 24, Number 2 What is Wilderness Therapy? Keith C. Russell   Fall, 2001 select
Volume 6, Number 2 What is NSIEE? National Society for Internships and Experiential Education   Fall, 1983 select
Volume 15, Number 2 What is Experiential Education? What is the Question? (August, 1992)Appears as part of the article ""What is Experiential Education?"" in The Theory of Experiential Education, 3rd edition** Steve Chapman.   August, 1992 select
Volume 15, Number 2 What is Experiential Education? Experiential Education as Emotionally-Engaged Learning. Appears as part of the article ""What is Experiential Education?"" in The Theory of Experiential Education, 3rd edition** Bill Proudman.   August, 1992 select
Volume 15, Number 2 What is Experiential Education? Asking the Question. Appears as part of the article ""What is Experiential Education?"" in The Theory of Experiential Education, 3rd edition** Pam McPhee.   August, 1992 select
Volume 6, Number 2 What is AEE? Association for Experiential Education   Fall, 1983 select
Volume 16, Number 1 What Constitutes Experience? Rethinking Theoretical Assumptions. Martha Bell   May 1993 select
Volume 11, Number 2 What About the Young Child? Rita Yerkes   Summer, 1988 select
Volume 21, Number 1 We Need Courage: Excerpts from the 1997 Kurt Hahn Address. Dan Garvey   May/June, 1998 select
Volume 8, Number 2 We Are All in This Together. Rita Yerkes   Summer, 1985 select
Volume 28, Number 2 Wayside Attractions: The Negotiation of Aspirations and Careers Among African-American Adolescent Males in an Urban Alternative School Reviewed by Billy O'Steen Author: B. Martin Yes Nov. 2005 select
Volume 10, Number 1 Value Formation, Alternative Lifestyles, and Experiential Education. Edwin C. Hettinger.   Spring, 1987 select
Volume 18, Number 2 Utilizing Hypnotic Language in Adventure Therapy. Christian Itin.   August 1995 select
Volume 19, Number 1 Using the Wilderness to Facilitate Adjustment to College: An Updated Description of Wilderness Orientation Programs. Dene Berman, Jennifer Davis-Berman   May/June 1996 select
Volume 19, Number 3 Using Experiential-based Curriculum with Children of Farmworking Migrant Families. Jose Lomeli.   December 1996 select
Volume 13, Number 2 Using Experiential Principles to Encourage Reform: An Interview with Peggy Walker Stevens. Joyce Hankey   August, 1990 select
Volume 18, Number 3 Using Experience for Learning Reviewed by Constance L. Russell. Editors: David Boud, Ruth Cohen, David Walker Yes December 1995 select
Volume 15, Number 3 Using Drama as a Cultural Bridge. Liane Brouillette.   November, 1992 select
Volume 22, Number 2 Using a Reflective Framework for Experiential Education in Teacher Education Classes. Garry Hoban.   Fall, 1999 select
Volume 30, Number 1 Urban Service-Learning: An Authentic Teaching Strategy to Deliver a Standards-Driven Curriculum Elizabeth G. Soslau and Deborah Spillane Yost   March, 2007 select
Volume 24, Number 1 University Students' Perceptions of Cooperative Learning: Implications for Administrators and Instructors Maurice Phipps, Cindy Phipps, Susan Kask, Scott Higgins   Spring, 2001 select
Volume 13, Number 3 Understanding Moral Development and Environmental Values through Experience. Almut Beringer   November, 1990 select
Volume 24, Number 3 Types of Positions, Job Responsibilities and Training Backgrounds of Outdoor Adventure Leaders Jacquie Medina   Winter, 2001 select
Volume 17, Number 1 Two-year Follow-up Report for the Wilderness Therapy Program. Jennifer Davis-Berman, Dene S. Berman.   May, 1994 select
Volume 19, Number 2 Two Physical Education Teachers' Experience of Project Adventure. Ben P. Dyson.   August 1996 select
Volume 7, Number 1 Two Perspectives on the Crisis in Education. Homer Page.   Spring, 1984 select
Volume 9, Number 3 Twenty Years of Cultural Journalism. Kathryn J. Olmstead.   Fall, 1986 select
Volume 28, Number 2 Turning Experiential Education and Critical Pedagogy Theory into Praxis Mary C. Breunig   Nov. 2005 select
Volume 14, Number 1 Troubled Young People After the Adventure Program: A Case Study. Carolyn Hutton Durgin, Douglas McEwen.   May, 1991 select
Volume 24, Number 3 Trends in Outdoor Adventure Education Aram Attarian   Winter, 2001 select
Volume 12, Number 3 Transpersonal Psychology: Facilitating Transformation in Outdoor Experiential Education. Michael H. Brown.   Fall, 1989 select
Volume 21, Number 3 Transforming Educational Curriculum and Service Learning. Kathleen L. Rice, Jane R. Brown.   December, 1998 select
Volume 22, Number 1 Training Corporate Managers to Facilitate: The Next Generation of Facilitating Experiential Methodologies? Simon Priest, Michael Gass, Karen Fitzpatrick.   June, 1999 select
Volume 12, Number 1 Tracking Mud into the House. Daniel Kirpatrick.   Spring, 1989 select
Volume 22, Number 3 Toward Green Challenge Courses Karl E. Johnson   December, 1999 select
Volume 27, Number 1 Toward an Ecological Paradigm in Adventure Programming Almut Beringer   July, 2004 select
Volume 12, Number 1 Too Young to Die. David C. Kolb.   Spring, 1989 select
Volume 5, Number 1 Today's Need for Environmental Learning. John C. Miles.   Spring, 1982 select
Volume 20, Number 1 Tips for Working With ADHD Students of All Ages Beth Robelia   May, 1997 select
Volume 11, Number 1 Tips for Staff Training. Brian Drypolcher, Dennis Jackson.   Spring, 1988 select
Volume 12, Number 2 Time, Place, and Community: Ingredients for Good Writing. Ian Sykes.   Summer, 1989 select
Volume 17, Number 1 Time Series Trends in Corporate Team Development. Simon Priest, Mary Ann Lesperance.   May, 1994 select
Volume 22, Number 1 Tikkun Olam: A Model for Healing the World. Dene S. Berman, Jennifer Davis-Berman   June, 1999 select
Volume 5, Number 2 Three Examples of Service Learning: The Changing Role of Service in Outward Bound. Robert S. MacArthur.   Summer, 1982 select
Volume 5, Number 2 Three Examples of Service Learning: ""Yes"" An Upbeat Project Buoyed by Student Initiative. Joy Hardin.   Summer, 1982 select
Volume 5, Number 2 Three Examples of Service Learning: ""Project Leadership"" Pairs Youth with Inner-City Children. H. Dean Evans, Roberta Bowers.   Summer, 1982 select
Volume 13, Number 1 Three Approaches to Evaluation: A Ropes Course Illustration. Marc Braverman, James Brenner, Phelan Fretz, Daniel Desmond   May, 1990 select
Volume 20, Number 1 Thinking Outside the Box: The Role of Adventure in Spiritual and Ethical Development. Michael Lewis McGowan.   May, 1997 select
Volume 26, Number 3 Therapy within Adventure: Proceedings of the Second International Adventure Therapy Conference Reviewed by Dene S. Berman, Jennifer Davis-Berman Editor(s): Kaye Richards, Barbara Smith Yes March 2004 select
Volume 17, Number 2 Therapeutic Wilderness Programs: A National Survey. Jennifer Davis-Berman, Dene S. Berman, Lynn Capone.   August, 1994 select
Volume 18, Number 2 Therapeutic Programming for Gay and Lesbian Youth: How Experiential Education can Support an At-Risk Population. Chip Bradish   August 1995 select
Volume 4, Number 1 Theory Misapplied: Teaching by Objectives and Cognitive Learning. Stanley J. Spector.   Spring, 1981 select
Volume 19, Number 1 Theory for Practice: A Framework for Thinking About Experiential Education. Rebecca Carver.   May/June 1996 select
Volume 15, Number 2 Theory and Practice. Michael Gass   August, 1992 select
Volume 16, Number 3 The yin-yang of experiential education research Karla A. Henderson   December 1993 select
Volume 27, Number 3 The Wisdom of Crowds: Why the Many are Smarter than the Few, and How Collective Wisdom Shapes Business Economies, Societies and Nations Reviewed by Todd Miner Author: J. Surowiecki Yes March 2005 select
Volume 30, Number 1 The Wilderness Within: Refelctions on Leisure and Life, 3rd. Edition Reviewed by Anthony Berkers Author: Dustin, Daniel L. Yes March, 2007 select
Volume 21, Number 1 The Wilderness Experience Program Industry in the United States: Characteristics and Dynamics. Greg Friese, John C Hendee, Mike Kinziger   May/June, 1998 select
Volume 22, Number 1 The Wilderness Expedition as a Rite of Passage: Meaning and Process in Experiential Education. Ken Andrews   June, 1999 select
Volume 17, Number 2 The Wilderness Condition: Essays on Environment and Civilization Reviewed by Bert Horwood. Author: Max Oelschlaeger Yes August, 1994 select
Volume 6, Number 3 The Wilderness As Therapy. Richard O. Kimball.   Winter, 1983 select
Volume 12, Number 1 The Walkabout Model: An Interview with Peter Copen. Clifford E. Knapp.   Spring, 1989 select
Volume 21, Number 1 The View from the Trenches (or Almost Everything You Need to Know to Implement an Experiential Education Program in an Urban High School). Kathy Gregg.   May/June, 1998 select
Volume 9, Number 1 The View from the Classroom. (Panel Discussion). Tom Herbert, Mike Loughery, Deborah Eads, Ava Heinrichsdorff   Spring, 1986 select
Volume 13, Number 1 The Value of Tracing an Apprenticeship. Martha Bell   May, 1990 select
Volume 10, Number 3 The Use of Ritual. Michael Adams   Fall, 1987 select
Volume 15, Number 1 The Use in Experiential Education of Ceremonies and Rituals from Native American Cultures. McClellan Hall.   May, 1992 select
Volume 15, Number 1 The Use in Experiential Education of Ceremonies and Rituals from Native American Cultures. G. Owen Couch.   May, 1992 select
Volume 17, Number 3 The Unschooled Mind: How Children Think and How Schools Should Teach Reviewed by Clifford E. Knapp. Author: Howard Gardner Yes December, 1994 select
Volume 17, Number 2 The Treatment of Bulimia Nervosa Through Adventure Therapy. Rebecca Maguire, Simon Priest.   August, 1994 select
Volume 19, Number 2 The Theory and Practice of Experiential Education: A Critical Look at Teaching Practices. Scott Wurdinger   August 1996 select
Volume 18, Number 3 The Theory and Practice of Challenge Education Reviewed by Kirk Hallowell. Authors: Thomas E. Smith, Christopher C. Rol,Mark D. Havens, Judith A. Hoyt. Yes December 1995 select
Volume 18, Number 3 The Teacher Education Program Consortium: A New Network for Professional Development in Experiential Education. Seymour Simmons, III.   December 1995 select
Volume 12, Number 2 The Student Teacher Who Wouldn't Go Away: Learning from Failure J. Gary Knowles, Virginia Hoefler   Summer, 1989 select
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