Debriefing Strategies in Adventure Based Counselling

2002 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
pp. 107-117
Author(s):  
Andrea Reupert ◽  
Darryl Maybery

This paper describes an Adventure Based Counselling (ABC) program that aimed to improve sixth grade student behaviour in the classroom. In particular, this paper focuses on the ABC debriefing strategy, as summarised in the “What?” “So What?” and “Now What?” format. This debriefing process was employed with both students and ABC program facilitators. While there is extensive literature concerned with the application of the ABC debrief with the target group, an ABC debrief with the facilitators of the program is lacking in the applied literature. The strategies and sample questions employed in the ABC format, as applied to both groups, are described in detail. The procedure was highly effective for both behavioural intervention with students and for maximising learning of the ABC facilitators.

1985 ◽  
Vol 69 (485) ◽  
pp. 113-114
Author(s):  
Harry T. Fogle ◽  
Linda D. Frey ◽  
Thomas W. Ingram ◽  
Patricia M. Leonard ◽  
Nancy Jean Martin ◽  
...  

1978 ◽  
Vol 71 (9) ◽  
pp. 734-736
Author(s):  
Judith B. Kohn

Several models for operations with integers are shown. The model for the product of two negatives was discovered by a sixth-grade student.


2007 ◽  
Vol 14 (5) ◽  
pp. 283-287
Author(s):  
Christine A. Browning ◽  
Gina Garza-Kling ◽  
Elizabeth Hill Sundling

The word angle may conjure up several thoughts—a corner, two rays and a vertex, or a degree measure. But what about the idea of a turn (a rotation around a fixed point) or of the space between two rays, and what exactly is a degree? Many upper-elementary students have such limited notions of angle that they struggle to provide an appropriate mathematical definition for the term and, instead, describe what we are measuring when we measure an angle. Yet, according to NCTM (2000), students in grades 6–8 must be able to “carefully examine the features of shapes in order to precisely define and describe fundamental shapes” (p. 233). Angle is certainly a prominent feature of shape, so, beginning in the elementary grades, providing students with opportunities to carefully explore the idea of angle is critical for the development of their understanding of geometry. Doing so, however, requires us as teachers to first realize the complexity of the concept of angle. As one sixth-grade student put it, “An angle is a lot more than just degrees.”


2011 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 77-83
Author(s):  
Sylvia F. Diehl

Children on the autism spectrum experience increased challenges, both academically and socially, when they move from elementary school to middle school and beyond. In fact, it is not unusual for a child to make great gains during elementary school to the point where special education services are reduced and the child begins to flourish. However, middle school can change this and bring a child with autism to the forefront of teacher concerns once again. This article presents the story of a sixth grade student with autism and the collaborative approach his education team used to address the challenges he faced upon entering middle school.


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