“…These include the opportunity to allow students to virtually experience challenging‐to‐access or dangerous environments (such as working laboratories, commercial premises, remote rainforests, derelict mines, or sites of conflict), places where the presence of students would be disruptive to others due to practical and ethical concerns (such as a class of 100 students visiting a small village of 50 people) or indeed places that no longer exist due to natural disasters or armed conflict. Learning in virtual as opposed to real SEEE can also assist institutions with the management of constrained budgets (Stainfield, Fisher, Ford, & Solem, ), increasing concern about liability issues (Pearson & Beckham, ) and increasing work load pressures on staff (Dredge & Schott, ). Pedagogically, a virtual environment also has a range of desirable features including the deliberate creation of affordances linked to specific learning objectives, the ability to easily record and repeat experiences with or without variations intended to enable deeper learning, and the ability to provide feedback in context.…”