“…This type of training also enhances self-concept (Finkenberg, Shows, & Dinucci, 1994), is more effective in facilitating critical thinking, encourages connecting with peers and engaging with peers out-of-classroom, increases knowledge of wellness, and improves time and priority management (Bell, 2012). In addition, adventure activities promote professional and personal growth, including increased self-awareness, and challenge personal boundaries by “discovering uniqueness, creating trust among one another, and demonstrating the ability to collectively establish group cohesion” (Human, 2012, p. 586; Human, 2006). University students show high levels of enjoyment and satisfaction with outdoor adventure education and report significant improvement in the use of group work skills, attitudes toward group work, and group work self-efficacy after joining the adventure education (Cooley, Burns, & Cumming, 2016).…”