Research: an essential ingredient in the outdoor recreation mix. (ORRRC At 40!).NOTE FROM THE EDITORS: Throughout the year, Parks & Recreation is highlighting sections of Outdoor Recreation For America in an effort to bring a valuables spotlight to the history of our profession and our community. We hope you will take to heart what our history provides and use its offerings to better yourself, your community and our parks. When the original Outdoor Recreation Resources Review Commission report was issued in 1962, its recommendations generally fell into one of four themes: * Natural resources of outstanding natural, aesthetic, scientific or historical/cultural value should be protected from unwise use or neglect. * Recreation resources should be wisely used and developed. * All citizens should have opportunities to discover and enjoy the outdoors. * There should be an equitable and effective balance between the recreational and other uses of natural resources. Two major forces were driving the development of the recommendations--the increasing pressures and demands being placed on the nation's natural resources, primarily through expanded use, and the many inefficiencies occurring in how public lands were being managed. Since the 1960s, more lands have been placed into "protected" categories, such as wilderness or parks, but overall, the total amount of available land and other resources available for outdoor recreation has remained static, while the number of users and desired uses for those resources continues to climb steeply. The ORRRC Mandate Decreasing or static resources coupled with increasing demands and user expectations has created the third major force in the management of our natural resources: How should decisions be made regarding natural resource use, and who gets to make these decisions? Not surprisingly, the ORRRC report advocated a "systematic and continuing program of research" to provide a basis for wise decision-making and sound management. The ORRRC report went on to suggest that recreation research be pursued along three distinct but not isolated lines: data collection, inventory and assessment; information for application and management decision-making; and fundamental and theoretical investigations. Since the report, research in outdoor recreation has proceeded along these three general directions, although the composition of the cadre (company) CADRE - The US software engineering vendor which merged with Bachman Information Systems to form Cayenne Software in July 1996. of researchers has changed and the overall emphasis has begun to shift. Much of the early recreation research, particularly that referred to in the ORRRC report, was developed and conducted by government organizations such as the U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service and the U.S. Department of the Interior National Park Service. This effort was particularly effective in creating a longitudinal component by building a cadre of recreation researchers who devoted their careers in science to recreation-related topics, in addition to directing funding to various recreation research projects. In many ways, these researchers laid the foundation from which much of our current knowledge has developed, including Driver's taxonomy taxonomy: see classification. taxonomy In biology, the classification of organisms into a hierarchy of groupings, from the general to the particular, that reflect evolutionary and usually morphological relationships: kingdom, phylum, class, order, of recreation motives (Driver & Toucher, 1970) and the concept of recreation specialization (Bryan, 1977). Contemporary Recreation Research Today, the scene is changing in several ways. First, the government is becoming less of a player in the overall recreation research effort, with fewer scientists within the federal system devoted exclusively to recreation research. In addition, the recreation research emphasis is being diluted di·lute tr.v. di·lut·ed, di·lut·ing, di·lutes 1. To make thinner or less concentrated by adding a liquid such as water. 2. To lessen the force, strength, purity, or brilliance of, especially by admixture. by more contemporary issues of understanding the human dimensions of natural resource management, societal so·ci·e·tal adj. Of or relating to the structure, organization, or functioning of society. so·ci e·tal·ly adv.Adj. decision-making processes Presented below is a list of topics on decision-making and decision-making processes: | width="" align="left" valign="top" |
| width="" align="left" valign="top" | The Promise of ORRRC Has society lived up to the lofty research goals and mandates set forth in the ORRRC report of 1962? The answer appears to be both "yes" and "no." "Yes," in the sense that outdoor recreation research, while moving away from a system primarily centered around federal scientists toward one focused around universities, non-governmental organizations “NGO” redirects here. For other uses, see NGO (disambiguation). A non-governmental organization (NGO) is a legally constituted organization created by private persons or organizations with no participation or representation of any government. and not-for-profit groups, has continued to serve as a focal point focal point n. See focus. for much of the research done in the broader areas of recreation, leisure and tourism. Moreover, the study parameters, hypotheses tested and methods used have become more sophisticated and capable of bringing a finer, more accurate understanding of the outdoor recreation phenomenon, all within the framework of a systematic and scientific paradigm. For example, research conducted under an outdoor recreation rubric RUBRIC, civil law. The title or inscription of any law or statute, because the copyists formerly drew and painted the title of laws and statutes rubro colore, in red letters. Ayl. Pand. B. 1, t. 8; Diet. do Juris. h.t. now commonly includes topics such as normative nor·ma·tive adj. Of, relating to, or prescribing a norm or standard: normative grammar. nor behaviors and values, measuring for a diverse mosaic of outcomes (e.g., family bonding or aesthetic appreciation), the effects of urbanization and culture on recreation behavior, and understanding how a sense of place plays a mediating role in the valuation process individuals and groups go through (Manning, 1999). The answer becomes "no" if we consider the long-term impact our outdoor recreation research has had on the public welfare. True, some of our research has aided decision-making in designing more efficacious ef·fi·ca·cious adj. Producing or capable of producing a desired effect. See Synonyms at effective. [From Latin effic management strategies, and yes, we do have a better understanding of some of the theoretical models, such as specialization and optimal arousal arousal /arous·al/ (ah-rou´z'l) 1. a state of responsiveness to sensory stimulation or excitability. 2. the act or state of waking from or as if from sleep. 3. , subscribed to in the field of outdoor recreation. But is our research fully addressing the important and contemporary issues our society needs from outdoor recreation? Back in the 1960s, the ORRRC report discussed the role that research would play in helping managers properly determine the carrying capacity carrying capacity the number of animal units that a farm or area will carry on a year round basis, including that needed for conservation of winter feed. Usually stated as dry cows or dry sheep equivalents per hectare. for a specific location, the effects of urbanization on outdoor recreation use patterns, the growing importance that values would play in natural resource decision-making and the importance of multidisciplinary mul·ti·dis·ci·pli·nar·y adj. Of, relating to, or making use of several disciplines at once: a multidisciplinary approach to teaching. research approaches. What's bothersome is that these ideas were set forth more than 40 years ago, yet much of the outdoor recreation research being conducted today still involves many of these issues. That being the case, I'd like to highlight one of the abandoned recommendations of the ORRRC report that held great promise for the research side of the equation--establishing the Bureau of Outdoor Recreation. Although I'm not advocating a reawakening reawakening n → despertar m reawakening n → réveil m reawakening n → Wiedererwachen nt of this sleeping giant Sleeping Giant may refer to: In geology:
BOR Board Of Regents BOR Bureau Of Reclamation BOR Bill of Rights BOR Biology Of Reproduction (journal) BOR Borealis BOR Board Of Review BOR Beats of Rage (video game) was creating the Research Advisory Committee, which would provide coordination and depository The place where a deposit is placed and kept, e.g., a bank, savings and loan institution, credit union, or trust company. A place where something is deposited or stored as for safekeeping or convenience, e.g., a safety deposit box. functions for the broad and often eclectic e·clec·tic adj. 1. Selecting or employing individual elements from a variety of sources, systems, or styles: an eclectic taste in music; an eclectic approach to managing the economy. 2. field of outdoor recreation research. After all, while there are many organizations involved in outdoor recreation research, there is little overall coordination, even at the federal and state level, thereby creating many inefficiencies and redundancies. In sum, what can one say about the state of outdoor recreation research on the 40th anniversary of the ORRRC report? Outdoor recreation research has certainly become more sophisticated and capable of tackling complex issues. This evolution is ironic, however, if one believes that the issues haven't seemed to change all that much since the early 1960s. There has certainly been a broadening of the researcher cadre with the inclusion of other academic disciplines, such as environmental psychology and social psychology, but has this greater breath come at the expense of reduced depth in the number of researchers primarily looking at recreation-related phenomenon? Finally, are we still looking at the right questions? Issues such as carrying capacity are important, but do they address any of the current social ills plaguing our society? Would we better fulfill the mandate of the ORRRC by developing a fuller understanding of issues such as how the outdoor environment can be used therapeutically, or how families and individuals can be strengthened? Would improving our understanding of how outdoor recreation can be better used to contribute to the overall wellness of individuals and our society be a worthy objective? Similarly, how can outdoor recreation be used to develop within our citizens a better understanding of ecological processes, and how we humans interact and depend upon those processes? Without a doubt, we've come a long way in the development of outdoor recreation research. But let's strive to make sure our research efforts don't simply move in a circle. The ORRRC report laid a sound foundation for future research efforts; our job is to continue to build the house. References Bryan, H. (1977). Leisure value systems and recreational specialization: The case of the trout fisherman. Journal of Leisure Research, 9, 174-87. Driver, B., & Toucher, R. (1970). Toward a behavioral interpretation of recreational engagements, with implications for planning. Elements of Outdoor Recreation Planning. Ann Arbor Ann Arbor, city (1990 pop. 109,592), seat of Washtenaw co., S Mich., on the Huron River; inc. 1851. It is a research and educational center, with a large number of government and industrial research and development firms, many in high-technology fields such as , MI: University Microfilms, 9-31. Manning, R. (1999). Studies in outdoor recreation: Search and research for satisfaction. Corvallis, OR: Oregon State University Press Oregon State University Press, or OSU Press, founded in 1961, is a university press that publishes roughly 15 titles per year and is part of the Oregon State University. . Alan Ewert, Ph.D., is a professor in the Department of Recreation and Park Administration and an associate dean in the School of Health, Physical Education and Recreation at Indiana University Indiana University, main campus at Bloomington; state supported; coeducational; chartered 1820 as a seminary, opened 1824. It became a college in 1828 and a university in 1838. The medical center (run jointly with Purdue Univ. . He is the editor of the Journal of Experiential Education |
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