For teachers, college professors, coaches, consultants, and organizational leaders, a big part of the job is to help others learn. Those who have discovered experiential learning theory and applied its principles in their work have experienced a transformational impact on the learners they serve and on their own professional development.
In The Experiential Educator Alice and David Kolb show how you can use these principles and practices to maximize learning. Their comprehensive handbook examines the philosophy of experiential learning as expressed in the works of foundational scholars from William James and John Dewey to Carl Rogers and Paulo Freire. They explore the basic concepts of experiential learning theory, describing the current state-of-the-art research and practice in
- the concepts of the learning cycle and learning style;
- experiential learning and the brain;
- how the spiral of learning leads to development;
- developing a positive learning identity; and
- helping learners to develop skills in mindful deliberate learning.
Application of these principles to promote individual, team, and organizational learning include
- creating hospitable spaces for learning that offer challenge and support;
- creating learning spaces to develop expertise and sustained lifelong learning; and
- key roles that educators need to teach around the learning cycle.