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A Little About ELD and Dr. Black
Dr. Joel Black earned his Ph.D. from
Pacific Western University in Experiential Education. He has degrees
in recreation, education, psychology and gifted education. He has
taught classes, seminars and workshops to students, professionals and
the merely curious in all fifty states and 11 foreign countries, has
held teaching certificates in four states, and is highly qualified
(under the new Federal guidelines) in seven areas, including all five
“solid” areas. He has taught students in every conceivable
setting, has designed three new educational models, has started up
four successful programs, has taught students from ages five to 95,
and has worked in all five arenas of education, Public, Private,
Home, Rehabilitative and Business. He owns Cascade Independent High
School, in Washington State. He is extensively traveled, well-read,
and the author of the premier text in Experiential Education. He is
the father of nine children, and has a home and yard so well
landscaped that it that stops traffic. A Renaissance Man, he also
dabbles in music, philanthropy, philosophy and finding patterns in
the clouds, with his four-year-old son.
Cascade Independent High School (CIH)
was originally founded to address the needs of students who had been
outside of the system and needed credits, or who had failed and
needed special help. Service to at-risk students, the forgotten and
the neglected, have always been a significant portion of its
clientele. Independent students, iconoclasts, and home-schoolers
seeking a diploma have constituted the balance. CIH can work with
students in any state, and can grant credit in any subject, so long
as the work and learning is, or can be, well-documented. CIH works
with independent students who create their own goals, curriculum,
evaluation, and who work at their own pace using self-selected
materials. It is quite possibly the most empowering high school in
America.
ELD began as a printer’s error. (Funny how the greatest things often occur unintentionally:
vulcanization, sticky notes, carbide steel.) The letters, which
introduce three critical aspects of any experiential design, appeared
at the top of an announcement slated for dissemination to businesses
in 1985. At that time Dr. Black had just co-authored a seminal
monograph on leadership with J.T. O’Leary of Purdue, and was
working with large companies (including Southland and GM) and schools
(including the Washington State Governor’s School, and Tennessee’s
Gifted Consortium) on “perceived risk,” high-intensity, outdoor,
leadership training programs. We liked the new name. It describes
our mission: Education, Leadership and Interpersonal Dynamics.
Since 1985, E.L.D. has run over 150
outdoor programs to develop youth and businesses, and has helped over
30,000 people achieve better grades, better jobs, better marriages,
and goals they had previously given up on. Additionally Dr. Black has
been involved with Scouting, 4-H Challenge, and other youth agencies,
and a variety of public and private schools, to build programs to
serve gifted students, at-risk students and home-schooled or
independent students. Along the way he has been recognized in every
issue of Who’s Who Among America’s Teachers except two,
probably the only teacher in history to be nominated so often.
Currently ELD owns CIH—through which
it helps many students each year earn a high school diploma who
otherwise might never earn one; takes students on credit-granting
educational tours (jointly with the world’s largest travel
company); runs wilderness programs; publishes books, and ghost-writes
for others; offers specialty items designed by former students;
offers landscaping ideas (in conjunction with former students); and
is in the design stages of a year-long, international “High School
Junior Year.”
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