This is the first book to explore the numerous ways in which mobile technologies and social media are influencing our outdoor experiences. Across the fields of outdoor education, outdoor recreation and leisure, and nature-based tourism, the book considers how practices within each of those domains are being influenced by dramatically shifting interactions between technology, humans, the natural world, and wider society. Drawing on cutting-edge research by leading scholars from around the world and exploring key concepts and theory, as well as developments in professional practice, the book…mehr
This is the first book to explore the numerous ways in which mobile technologies and social media are influencing our outdoor experiences.
Across the fields of outdoor education, outdoor recreation and leisure, and nature-based tourism, the book considers how practices within each of those domains are being influenced by dramatically shifting interactions between technology, humans, the natural world, and wider society. Drawing on cutting-edge research by leading scholars from around the world and exploring key concepts and theory, as well as developments in professional practice, the book explains how digital technology and media are no longer separate from typical human and social activity. Instead, the broader field of outdoor studies can be viewed as a world of intertwined socio-technical assemblages that need to be understood in more diverse ways. The book offers a full-spectrum view of this profound shift in our engagement with the world around us by presenting new work on subjects including networked spaces in residential outdoor education, digital competencies for outdoor educators, the use of social media in climbing communities, and the impact of digital technologies on experiences of adventure tourism.
This is essential reading for anybody with an interest in outdoor studies, outdoor education, adventure education, leisure studies, tourism, environmental studies, environmental education, or science, technology, and society studies.
Simon Kennedy Beames is Professor of Friluftsliv at the Norwegian School of Sport Sciences, Norway. He has taught outdoor education for more than 30 years, predominantly in Southeast Asia, North America, and Europe. He has published four books with Routledge: Learning Outside the Classroom, Adventurous Learning, Outdoor Adventure and Social Theory, and Outdoor Learning across the Curriculum. Patrick T. Maher is Professor of Physical and Health Education at Nipissing University, Canada. His research blends outdoor and environmental education, sustainable nature-based tourism, and narratives from the polar regions. Pat is the editor-in-chief of the Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, as well as the lead of the UArctic Thematic Network on Northern Tourism.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Introduction: Where Did We Start and Where Will This Book Take Us? PART I: Outdoor Education 2. Mobile Technology and Social Media in the Assemblage of Outdoor Pursuits: A Theoretical Stance on Complexity and Uncertainty 3. A Postdigital Lens on Outdoor Research 4. Outdoor Education Technology and the Anthropocene 5. Managing Digital Technology in Outdoor Education 6. Digital Competence in Outdoor Education 7. Technological Affordances in Understanding Biodiversity: Life Place and Time 8. Assembling Mobile Technology and Outdoor Education Practice: Affordances Pitfalls and Pedagogical Pathways 9. Youth Identity and Social Media: The Promise of Outdoor Education as a Context for Identity Development 10. Smartwatches Bodies and Landscapes: Experiencing the Mountains as Cyborgs 11. The Digital Canoe Trip: Do We Return to Our Old Teaching Styles After COVID-19? 12. Bridging Outdoor Education Digital Technology and Well-Being through Pedagogical and Psychological Perspectives PART II: Outdoor Recreation 13. A Case for Using Mobile Technology to Facilitate Inclusion in the Outdoors for Those Who Live with Disabilities and/or Chronic Illness: Crossing the Digital Crevasse 14. The Power and Peril of Smartphones and Social Media in Avalanche Terrain 15. Social Media and Research in a Climbing Community: Gleaning Insights 16. The Art of Dotwatching in Ultra-Distance Cycling: When a Human Becomes a Dot 17. Becoming an Outdoors Person: Identity Transformation through Nature Activity and Social Media in Norway 18. Use of Digital Technologies for Hiking: A Quantitative Study of Four Spanish Protected Areas 19. The Promises and Perils of Danish Nature App Developers 20. Trail and Mountain Running Vlogging: Dizziness Disorder and Joy 21. Communication and Cultural Significance in Two Danish Outdoor Facebook Groups: "Check Out My Campfire See My Big Catch - I Am an Outdoor Person!" 22. Navigating Outdoor Activities in Polluted Air: Embodiment of Particulate Matter and Mobile Applications PART III: Nature-based Tourism 23. Using Social Media to Examine Ambassadorship in Tourism 24. Virtual Meeting Spaces and Sustainable Arctic Communities: All Who Wander Are Not Lost 25. The Absence of Everydayness in Social Media Images from Hiking Trips: Sharing the Epic 26. Digital Tools and New Technologies: Opportunities or Threats to Participatory Sport Events? 27. Big Data in Adventure Travel 28. Reflections on the Impact of the Digital Shift in Nature-Based Adventure Tourism: Connected Disconnections in the Arctic PART IV: Overlappers and Outliers 29. Equity Social Media and the Outdoors 30. Trekking and Digital Technologies: Nudging Outdoor Habits in New Directions? 31. Technology Creep and the Beneficial Burden: Cautionary Tales for Outdoor Educators 32. Understanding Relations between People Nature and the Digital: Why and How to Conduct Non-Digital-Centric Research? 33. Hyperreality Social Media and Increasing Opportunities for Young People to Engage with Nature 34. Outdoor Play Mediated through Pokémon: Facing the Snorlax 35. Physical Activity and Health Monitoring with Wearable Technologies: A New Fitness Trend with Concerns for Reliable Output and Data Security 36. Using Cellphones for Visualizing the Social and Environmental Relations of Community Gardens: "Keeping My Eyes Everywhere" 37. Western and Indigenous Ideas of Sustainability the Tragedy of the Commons and Mobile Technologies: Sustaining our Inner Environments 38. Mobile Technology Social Media and the Outdoors: Stepping into the Future with Excitement and Apprehension
1. Introduction: Where Did We Start and Where Will This Book Take Us? PART I: Outdoor Education 2. Mobile Technology and Social Media in the Assemblage of Outdoor Pursuits: A Theoretical Stance on Complexity and Uncertainty 3. A Postdigital Lens on Outdoor Research 4. Outdoor Education Technology and the Anthropocene 5. Managing Digital Technology in Outdoor Education 6. Digital Competence in Outdoor Education 7. Technological Affordances in Understanding Biodiversity: Life Place and Time 8. Assembling Mobile Technology and Outdoor Education Practice: Affordances Pitfalls and Pedagogical Pathways 9. Youth Identity and Social Media: The Promise of Outdoor Education as a Context for Identity Development 10. Smartwatches Bodies and Landscapes: Experiencing the Mountains as Cyborgs 11. The Digital Canoe Trip: Do We Return to Our Old Teaching Styles After COVID-19? 12. Bridging Outdoor Education Digital Technology and Well-Being through Pedagogical and Psychological Perspectives PART II: Outdoor Recreation 13. A Case for Using Mobile Technology to Facilitate Inclusion in the Outdoors for Those Who Live with Disabilities and/or Chronic Illness: Crossing the Digital Crevasse 14. The Power and Peril of Smartphones and Social Media in Avalanche Terrain 15. Social Media and Research in a Climbing Community: Gleaning Insights 16. The Art of Dotwatching in Ultra-Distance Cycling: When a Human Becomes a Dot 17. Becoming an Outdoors Person: Identity Transformation through Nature Activity and Social Media in Norway 18. Use of Digital Technologies for Hiking: A Quantitative Study of Four Spanish Protected Areas 19. The Promises and Perils of Danish Nature App Developers 20. Trail and Mountain Running Vlogging: Dizziness Disorder and Joy 21. Communication and Cultural Significance in Two Danish Outdoor Facebook Groups: "Check Out My Campfire See My Big Catch - I Am an Outdoor Person!" 22. Navigating Outdoor Activities in Polluted Air: Embodiment of Particulate Matter and Mobile Applications PART III: Nature-based Tourism 23. Using Social Media to Examine Ambassadorship in Tourism 24. Virtual Meeting Spaces and Sustainable Arctic Communities: All Who Wander Are Not Lost 25. The Absence of Everydayness in Social Media Images from Hiking Trips: Sharing the Epic 26. Digital Tools and New Technologies: Opportunities or Threats to Participatory Sport Events? 27. Big Data in Adventure Travel 28. Reflections on the Impact of the Digital Shift in Nature-Based Adventure Tourism: Connected Disconnections in the Arctic PART IV: Overlappers and Outliers 29. Equity Social Media and the Outdoors 30. Trekking and Digital Technologies: Nudging Outdoor Habits in New Directions? 31. Technology Creep and the Beneficial Burden: Cautionary Tales for Outdoor Educators 32. Understanding Relations between People Nature and the Digital: Why and How to Conduct Non-Digital-Centric Research? 33. Hyperreality Social Media and Increasing Opportunities for Young People to Engage with Nature 34. Outdoor Play Mediated through Pokémon: Facing the Snorlax 35. Physical Activity and Health Monitoring with Wearable Technologies: A New Fitness Trend with Concerns for Reliable Output and Data Security 36. Using Cellphones for Visualizing the Social and Environmental Relations of Community Gardens: "Keeping My Eyes Everywhere" 37. Western and Indigenous Ideas of Sustainability the Tragedy of the Commons and Mobile Technologies: Sustaining our Inner Environments 38. Mobile Technology Social Media and the Outdoors: Stepping into the Future with Excitement and Apprehension
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