Adventure Education (B.A.)

Program Overview

The Adventure Education major will not accept new students after Fall 2019.

This major will prepare the individual for a career as an adventure educator. The student will gain the theory, knowledge, skills, and experience necessary to successfully plan, implement, administer, and supervise educational experiences in the outdoor setting. Adventure education programs focus on the interpersonal relationships and personal growth that can occur during outdoor adventure activities and include challenge course experiences, extended wilderness trips, day activities such as rock climbing, caving, and canoeing. Students have the option to spend a semester on a National Outdoor Leadership School (NOLS) course in the Pacific Northwest, Rocky Mountains, or desert southwest. There are additional fees for courses that involve certifications and/or travel.

Program Learning Outcomes

Graduates from Messiah’s Adventure Education program can:

  1. Identify personal areas of interest and strength as they relate to career, service, and graduate school options in adventure education.

  2. Explain and identify the theoretical, philosophical, and historical foundations of adventure education. 
  3. Identify key professional organizations and discuss the breadth of professional opportunities within adventure education.
  4. Identify key professional organizations and discuss the breadth of professional opportunities within adventure education.
  5. Identify key learning theories, leadership theories, and group dynamic theories utilized in adventure programming.
  6. Identify, locate, and critically review research in adventure education.
  7. Effectively design, facilitate, and lead education experiences incorporating sound judgment/decision making and group processing skills.
  8. Synthesize data from program experiences to evaluate program effectiveness.
  9. Explain and apply various models of Christian integration to adventure programming activities.
  10. Demonstrate effective program management including the principles of safety and risk management.
  11. Demonstrate technical skills competency in a variety of adventure activity areas and will be able to instruct and lead others in these activities.
  12. Demonstrate a positive environmental ethic and will be able to articulate the importance of Leave No Trace outdoor practices.

Major Requirements

Complete the following for your major:

ADED 139Wilderness Encounter

3

ADED 180Wilderness First Responder

3

ADED 250Foundations of Adventure Education

3

ADED 251Outdoor Leadership and Teaching Methods

3

ADED 288Challenge Course Facilitation and Management

3

ADED 331Adventure Processing and Group Facilitation

3

ADED 351Programming and Trip Design

3

ADED 352Trip Implementation and Evaluation

3

ADED 401Advanced Technical Skills

3

ADED 411Senior Seminar for Adventure Education

3

APHS 170Concepts of Conditioning

2

APHS 201Principles of Exercise Science

3

EDUC 331Instructional Design and Assessment for Middle and Secondary Grades

3

LEAD 310Leadership Theory and Development

3

HPED 332Teaching Adapted Physical Education

1

HPED 423Principles of Administration

3

WELL 135Non-Traditional Games

1

ADED 411: Fulfills Writing Enriched course requirement for Major.

At least five credits from the following:

ADED 281Caving Instructor

2

ADED 282Rock Climbing Instructor

3

ADED 286Paddlesports Instructor

3

At least three credits from the following:

APHS 271Kinesiology

3

BIOL 185Human Anatomy and Physiology I

4

BIOL 258Human Biology

4

Three credits from the following (3):

BIOL 117Field Biology

3

ENVS 140/SUST 140Introduction to Ecology and Sustainability

3

At least one credit from the following

INTE 391Internship

1-3

INTE 394Internship

4-12

INTE 391 must be taken for a letter grade.

QuEST Requirements

Experiential Learning requirement met/major
QuEST requirements Credits
First Year Seminar 3
Oral Communication 3
Created and Called for Community (W) 3
Mathematical Sciences 3-4
Laboratory Science (BIOL 117, BIOL 140 or BIOL 258) met/major
Science, Technology & the World (APHS 201) waived
Two of the following:
   Social Science (EDUC 203)
   European History or United States History
met/major
3
European History or United States History 3
Literature 3
Philosophy and Religion 3
Arts 3
First Semester of Language 3
Second Semester of Language 3
Third Semester of Language or Cross Cultural 3
Non-Western Studies 2 or 3
Bible 3
Christian Beliefs 3
Wellness course (WELL 135) met/major
Ethics, World Views or Pluralism 3
QuEST requirements 44-46
Major requirements 61-63
Free electives 18-14
Total credits 123