4.6 Article

Negative student emotions and educator skill in experiential education: a taxonomy of classroom activities

Journal

HIGHER EDUCATION
Volume 83, Issue 5, Pages 987-1002

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10734-021-00720-9

Keywords

Experiential learning; Engaged learning; Academic emotions; Student emotions; Negative student emotions; Course design; Achievement emotions; Epistemic emotions; Experiential activity; Educator skill

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This article explores the transformative effects of experiential teaching practices on students, presenting a taxonomy based on negative emotions and educator skill levels. Through survey data, the validity of the taxonomy was confirmed, providing guidance for future research and practical considerations in experiential education.
Experiential teaching practices can provide transformative learning opportunities for students. However, thus far the experiential education literature considers experiential activities monolithically, without acknowledging differences in emotions, particularly negative emotions, students may experience or educator skill in facilitating them. We hypothesized and assessed a step up taxonomy that differentiates activities by the negative emotions that students may experience and the educator skill required to run the activity effectively. We mapped 18 representative experiential activities onto four different levels, each requiring increased educator facilitation skill in managing potential student emotional distress. We proposed that as levels of student emotional risk and engagement increase, so do required educator disciplinary knowledge and facilitation skill in using different activities. Using survey data, a principal component analysis indicated a four-level taxonomy populated by different teaching activities. After sharing our hypothesized taxonomy and discussing how we modified it after empirical examination, we end the article with avenues for future research and practical considerations for experiential educators in any discipline that integrates experiential activities.

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