The main reason is that I genuinely believe that, if tackled correctly, soft skills can be transferred. It may not be obvious and a lot of the time our job is to explain or get the participants to consider how they can be transferred, but it can be done. I’ve seen many examples in the military and also have personal experience of leading a month long expedition to Namibia where soft skills development was paramount. In short, the participants may never need to abseil again but they will be required to step into the unknown and if we can help each individual develop coping strategies for such occasions then we are doing our job.
This brings me on to a key issue with soft skills transfer. If you’ve got the participants for a month, there is time to make considerable inroads. What if you’ve only got them for a week, or a day, or just an afternoon session? Is there any point in delivering soft skills for such a short period? I believe there is as it ensures that the soft skills tap remains dripping throughout their experience and subsequent experiences in the outdoors. Taking Kurt Hahn slightly out of context, we need to spark the fire for others to keep alight.
Could the participants develop in the same way even if we don’t deliver any soft skills as suggested in Baillie’s concept from the 1960s of “letting the mountains speak for themselves”? I think they probably would but it would be a slower process and arguably less constrained. Essentially, we would have less control over the outcomes. From personal experience, I’ve noticed that some participants need lots of my time whereas others seem to get it without a lot of interaction; this latter group seem to fit Baillie’s concept.
For me as part time a freelance leader, I’m in the fortunate position to pick and choose what I do. I enjoy soft skills development and hence I’ve targeted that area to enhance my own job satisfaction.
you have been in a very privilaged position to lead month long expeditions and have therefore seen the possibility of soft skills development first hand. do you think that there is a // adventure paradigm for soft skills?
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