National Collegiate Honors Council
Date of this Version
2018
Document Type
Article
Citation
Honors in Practice 14 (2018)
Abstract
Experiential learning is, for me, a preeminent means to accomplish goals that are fundamental to the entire educational enterprise. It is a set of strategies that structure acquisition of information, analysis of ideas, and selfreflection in order to pull people into active engagement with their world. Among these strategies are skills of observation and interpretation that require learners to take careful note and to examine themselves as processors of the details they themselves assemble into meaningful patterns, thus generating the insight, over and over again, that it is they who create the meaning they come to attach to events and to human interchange. The greater their awareness of what it is they are doing, the likelier it is that the meanings they create will confer on them the edge it takes to move forward with strength and to be part of a world they really want to be part of. In some sense, then, these strategies help students to be actors, not objects of everyone else’s acting on them. Students often say that one or another immersion experience has “transformed” them. We as educators often call this metamorphosis “empowerment.”
Comments
Copyright 2018 National Collegiate Honors Council