The goal of the East Texas Experiential Learning Center was to reduce multiple risk factors for the use and abuse of alcohol, tobacco, illegal drugs, and inhalants (ATIDI) among economically disadvantaged seventh graders in Nacogdoches, a rural East Texas community. The project consisted of school-based intervention, afterschool trips, weekend day trips at local wilderness facilities and forestlands, Wilderness Challenge Ropes adventure camp (5-day sessions), and community-based programming.
Objectives of the project:
The research design of this study was a pretest–posttest, comparison-group experimental design. The sample population was randomly selected from incoming seventh grade students at Thomas J. Rusk Middle School in Nacogdoches who were assigned to either a treatment group or a control group. The population base over a 3-year period consisted of four cohorts, with 396 treatment subjects and 257 control subjects. However, this study is restricted to cohort 4, which was the only complete year of the grant. Cohort 4 consisted of 105 treatment subjects (54 percent white, 28 percent African-American, and 18 percent Hispanic) and 93 control subjects (55 percent white, 32 percent African-American, and 13 percent Hispanic). All students were assessed preintervention and postintervention through the National Youth Survey, which measures risk factors, resiliency, self-efficacy, ATIDI attitudes, ATIDI use, personal autonomy, self-esteem and self-image, adjustment issues, and parent, school, intellectual, and school bonding.
It appears that experiential and adventure education does produce some observable change with seventh grade students in several areas of performance. The program succeeded in promoting resiliency and a sense of trust in the school or treatment environment. In addition, the intervention significantly improved overall academic performance, and discipline reports were significantly fewer for the experimental group than for the control group.
The study was limited in that researchers were able to collect data on only one cohort, which does not allow for the comparison of different treatment groups. Owing to time constraints, the study was unable to determine whether participants in experiential learning differ on numerous personality traits or if they indirectly differ on educational characteristics from those who do not wish to participate. Another limitation is the nature of the National Youth Survey, which is directed to a population unlike the one found in rural East Texas.
Caramanian, Paul. 1998. “The Impact of Experiential Learning on the Perception of Seventh Grade Students Regarding the Use of Alcohol, Tobacco, Other Drugs, and Inhalants.” Unpublished Dissertation. Houston, Texas: Texas Southern University.
Choate, Robert. 1999. “East Texas Experiential Learning Center: Final Report.” Nacogdoches, Texas: East Texas Experiential Learning Center.
Bruce Payette, Ph.D.
SFA Station
P.O. Box 13019
Nacogdoches, TX 75962
E-mail: Bpayette@sfasu.edu