Minichiello, Miles2018-10-022018-10-0220182018-10-02http://hdl.handle.net/1828/10132Rite of passage is a term that is used widely and uncritically in the field of outdoor education. This hermeneutic research project explores how a third-generation Canadian outdoor educator explores how rites of passage are understood in outdoor education. On this hermeneutic journey I set out to provide a more complex understanding of rites of passage in outdoor education. In exploring the literature of rites of passage in outdoor education, I noticed that there is a lack of discussion on non-Indigenous practitioners’ cultural heritage and how to address the desire many practitioners have for ritual. I used Stephen Jenkinson’s texts as a foundation for the hermeneutic conversations that I had with rites of passage in outdoor education. The research journey shifted from focusing on rites of passage to how outdoor educators could build a ritual skillset. I propose five propositions of ritual that may help practitioners develop their own ritual sensibility.enAvailable to the World Wide WebOutdoor educationStephen JenkinsonRitual skillsetCultural heritageSometimes even a single feather is enough to fly: a hermeneutic journey through rites of passage in outdoor educationThesis