Sailing ship
 
Alan Machin: Tourism As Education
Home page: photos, papers, ideas on tourism, education and communication
 
 
Awards Ceremony 2008
The thirteenth Leeds Met Tourism Awards event
 
 
International Centre for Responsible Tourism
A major addition to Leeds Met Tourism work
 
 
Final Year Students' Visit To Halifax, 11 April '08
A close look at tourism development within an industrial community
 
 
Career Networking
Photos of the 9 April '08 student event at Headingley
 
 
Final Year Students' Social - 18 Dec 07
Pictures from this classic event
 
 
Idealog - December 2007
Ideas, notes and comments
 
 
More About Malta
A Photo Feature On Returning To The Islands
 
 
Stimulating New Ideas In Tourism Teaching
Widening Participation and Debate
 
 
Idealog - November 2007
Ideas, notes and comments
 
 
Barcelona
(New page being prepared)
 
 
Idealog - October 2007
Coton Military Cemetery; Education and Tourism; Chatham Maritime; Dickens World; Quiz Answers; Tourist Guides; Mediation In Tourism
 
 
Idealog 2007 CONTENTS
FULL list of 2007 entries with the date of posting
 
 
Idealog - September 2007
Plane Paradox;Tour Guiding; Where in the World?; Do Tourism Students Know Where They Are?; Leeds Met's Wow!; Sea Harrier; Scarborough and Tourism As Education; Doing A Dissertation; Types of Tourist; A Media Lens; Cost of Travelling Alone; Risk of Bias?
 
 
Idealog - August 2007
A People Industry; Heritage Interpretation; Lud's Church; Tourists Go Home!; Stone Gappe YHA; Insight Guides; Eyewitness Guides; Bramhope Tunnel; Elizabethan Progress; Information Quality Matrix
 
 
Idealog - July 2007
Hidden Heroes, Health Tourism, Holme Fen Posts; Harrogate (again); Whitby Abbey; Dramatic Interpretation; Harrogate Interpretation, Attractions and Royal Hall
 
 
Idealog - June 2007
Christian Pilgrimage; Cincinnati Museums Centre; The Coming of the Guide Book; Talking to Tourists - Media, Stages of the Visit, The Service Journey; Tourism's Missing Link; The Final Call; SATuration level; Halifax's Edwardian Window on the World
 
 
Idealog - May 2007
Martin and Osa Johnson, Wensleydale Creamery, Malham Tarn, Thomas Cook, Northern Ireland's Tourism Rebuild, Jamestown Festival Park, Cite des Sciences
 
 
Idealog - April 2007
The Promenade Plantee, The Jardin des Plantes, Environmental Data, Victorian Beauty Spot Rediscovered, Jamestown, The Anglers' Country Park, Children's Museums, Fairburn Ings
 
 
Idealog - March 2007
A Sense of the Past- The 'Amsterdam', The Outdoor Classroom, Film-Induced Tourism, Making Tracks for the Coast and Country, Pictures, Context and Meaning, Classics-on-Sea, Hi Hi Everyone!, Dark Side of the Dream, Holodyne - The Action Cycle
 
 
The Man Who Drew Tintin
Herge's centenary exhibition in Paris
 
 
Idealog - February 2007
Don't Go There!, Space Tourism, The Crystal Cathedral, New Books on Tourism, Dark Tourism - Undercliffe Cemetery, Showcase - The Louvre, A Class Act, First Impressions Count, Postal Pleasures, Canaletto in Venice, Serpent Mound, Capsule Culture etc
 
 
Idealog - January 2007
Capsule Culture,Seaside Style, Poble Espanyol, Mallorca, Edgar Dale, Children's Holiday Homes, Representations of Reality, Outdoor Education in Germany, Baedeker Guides, Geography Textbooks, Environmental Data Theory etc
 
 
Scarborough: history in view
Photos and panoramas of Scarborough with notes
 
 
Idealog - December 2006
Writers on Landscape, Story Books, The Deep, Flour Power and the Archers,Showcases: Grand Tour, Halifax Piece Hall, Books of Concern about Tourism, Tourist Traces, Tourist Typologies, The Growth of Educational Tourism, The Field Studies Council, etc
 
 
Idealog - November 2006
A blog of ideas, comments and notes
 
 
Idealog - October 2006
A blog of ideas, comments and notes
 
 
Idealog - September 2006
A blog of ideas, comments and notes
 
 
Idealog - August 2006
Tourism and Transport; Dark Tourism - Book, Theory, Mill, War, Skeleton, Diana and Dodi, Arlington, Korea; Slavery, Renewal: Yorkshire
 
 
Idealog: April-June 2006
Exploring the world through tourism, the media and education
 
 
Travel To Understand: Belfast
Telling the stories of troubled times
 
 
Travel to Understand: Pride of Place
Informing Communities
 
 
Museums As Mass Media: Ironbridge
Editing views of the past through recreations of history
 
 
The Monterey Bay Aquarium
An outstanding educational facility in California
 
 
Chicago: Tourism Re-Imaging
A closer view of an iconic city
 
 
Calderdale - A Case Study in Tourism Development and Urban Change
A Case Study in Tourism Development and Urban Change
 
 
Scarborough's Navy Rules the Waves
An old tradition draws the tourists
 
 
Creating Colonial Williamsburg
A critical study of an American icon
 
 
Colonial Williamsburg
A Virginia history showcase
 
 
A Social Club Outing By Train, 1935
How to do Scotland in 30 hours flat
 
 
Going Dutch
Presenting the past in the Netherlands
 
 
Keukenhof: Business is Blooming
Using tourism to promote an industry
 
 
A View of Italy for the City
Trentham Gardens Revived
 
 
A Case Study in Heritage Management
A curious tale of misleading publicity
 
 
Perfection in Paradise: The Eden Project
New page being added: The Eden Project's design for success
 
 
Prague Tourist Shows
Outstanding showcase attractions in the city
 
 
Escaping From Slavery: Facing Our Past
The US National Underground Railroad Freedom Center
 
 
VIEWPOINTS
Pages below: essays, reviews. This list is being sorted further.
 
 
Lost Horizon
Losing sight of tourism's value
 
 
The Beckoning Horizon
Educational Origins of Tourism
 
 
Final Years' Christmas Social, 2006
An informal event at the City Campus
 
 
3D Media
Tourism communicating
 
 
Crossing the Channel
Tourism, Media and Education
 
 
A Positive Role
Tourism As Education
 
 
The Educational Origins of Tourism
Discussion paper
 
 
The Development of Educational Tourism
Key dates in the development of educational tourism
 
 
Retracing the Steps: Tourism as Education
ATLAS Conference paper given in Finland, 2000
 
 
Tourism and Historic Towns: The Cultural Key
A background paper for a Council of Europe Conference
 
 
The Social Helix
Visitor Interpretation as a Tool for Social Development, 1989
 
 
LEEDS MET TOURISM COURSE PHOTO PAGES
 
 
Alumni News
The Leeds Met Tourism Management Globetrotters' Club
 
 
Alumni at Work
The kind of jobs that our Alumni obtain
 
 
Job Vacancies
De Vere Oulton Hall Hotel; Emirates Airline
 
 
End of course celebration 2008
Pub and picnic in Headingley and Hyde Park
 
 
Awards Ceremony 2007
Photos from the big day
 
 
Malta Residential, 14-21 Feb 2006 - Page 1
Reports and Pictures
 
 
Malta Residential, 14-21 Feb 2006 - Page 2
Photos and reports of Friday 17 Feb onwards
 
 
Malta Residential, 14-21 February 2006 - Page 3
Reports and pictures from Sunday, 19 February onwards
 
 
Malta Residential 17-24 November 2004
Leeds tourism management residential Malta 2004
 
 
Malta Residential, December 2003
Photos of a seven-day visit
 
 
Tourism Alumni Reunion, 8 March 2003
Leeds tourism students reunion 2003
 
 
Level 1 trip to Blackpool
Study Time and Socialising: 7 March 2007
 
 
Scarborough
Photos from level 1 residentials
 
 
Bibliography
Books and other works useful in studying tourism as education
 
 
Tourist Photography
(New page being prepared)
 
 
World Geography Quiz 1
A test of your knowledge
 
 
Charleston, South Carolina
A photo essay about a fine historic city
 
 
Artists By Nature
West Yorkshire Sculpture Park
 
 
About the author
Brief details
 
 

Crossing the Channel

Tourists by the million have crossed from Britain to France over more than three centuries. Their destinations might have been the towns of the French coast, more distant places in Europe, or even further to the continents beyond the Mediterranean and the Black Sea. During the twentieth century air transport delivered a faster alternative, and in its closing years the Channel Tunnel gave rail links to the continental system.

Those travellers might have been seeking relaxation on sunny beaches, quiet countryside, city life, social adventure or any of a dozen other opportunities. For each and every one, something had attracted them to go abroad: stories heard from friends and acquaintances, or what they learnt in school. Or perhaps the reports of other travellers in newspapers and television. There may have been someone in a foreign country with whom they corresponded or talked on the telephone. In recent years the internet or the web might have played its part in bringing tempting tales of the enjoyment to be found far away.

All these sources of information added to the jigsaw of knowledge held by the recipient. Some of it, lively and fresh in the memory, would soon fade. Other snippets in letters and photos, leaflets, newspaper clippings, written notes, books, videos – even some souvenir presented by another traveller – would last longer, teasing reminders of an idea, an image, of another place desired, awaiting visitation.

These sources can be divided into four groups. The first are those brought by personal contact with people. The starters here are our parents, family members, friends and acquaintances, the people at home. As the youngest of children these are the sources of all our world knowledge. But we learn to crawl and then to walk, opening up new sets of opportunities for discovery for the first time as we explore our surroundings, opening doors onto the outside world and beginning to make our own way into places where before we could only go with parents. This is the second group of information sources – the different forms of movement and means of travel. Walking is one, riding in a car or on a bike, are others. Buses, trains, ships and planes perhaps come later. Personal contacts are increased through the distinctive contribution of travel.

Each mode of movement has its own characteristics and peculiarities. For example, when we walk we have an all-round vision of the world, full of sounds and smells, things to touch and even to taste. A car on the other hand is restricted, cut off from all but vision and some sounds, some smells, and it goes where the driver chooses. As passengers we don’t make the choice. Such a source of frustration to an exploring child! This feature, with someone else deciding where to go, and controlling therefore what we encounter, is a form of selection which elsewhere, in the media, is called editing, and it is found everywhere in travel and therefore in tourism too.

Very young children are exposed to the media of postal services, telephone and internet. Sometimes they are what is termed one-to-one, as with the telephone or individual postal messages like a birthday card; sometimes one-to-many as with a mass mailing leaflet or web page. These latter forms lead in to the mass media of newspapers, books, television, radio, audio and video recordings. Less common now are public speeches, once a staple means of political persuasion but now turned over to the broadcast media or set in films or plays. All of these media represent indirect ways of accessing world knowledge. They rely entirely on the opinions and actions of other people in supplying information – the mediators of knowledge. It is interesting that our growing child has been in this situation before: relying on parents and others is also a matter of relying on someone else’s views and timing.

The fourth group of discovery processes are those within education – here meaning formal education, organised and structured, as opposed to the ‘informal’ which is that which we do ourselves when we move to find out things for ourselves. Of course it needs to be said straight away that all education relies on activities ranging from the more didactic – being told by someone else – to the heuristic – learning by our own efforts. Over time there has been a shift from the didactic towards the heuristic, for good educational reasons, the growth of discovery media available, the increasing interactivity of communication and the sheer numbers of people taking part. Heuristics is about finding out, the student’s learning processes rather than the teacher’s telling processes. In this discussion ‘education’ refers to those structured and organised activities run by professional tutors, trainers and mentors. It means education as it is organised in schools, colleges, universities and adult education classes, and will be referred to as ‘formal’ education.

Four groups of activity have been described in the order in which they are encountered by the child growing into an adult. Formal education is entered only after the other three are well established as influences, somewhere around the age of five. Formal education is usually seen as completed after some ten to twenty years. However, for those who can do so, and who want to take advantage of them, formal systems of education are available life long.

Each of the four groups employs and builds on the previous groups’ activities. So travel extends the face-to-face nature of primary contacts with family members and others by adding the outcomes of mobility, the exploration of new places and people. The media extends the range again with indirect or ‘virtual’ access to more destinations and sources beyond the normal reach. They also stimulate efforts to reach at least some of those places. Finally, education uses face-to-face contact, travel and communications media to reach its objectives.

The suggestion to be made is therefore that travel, and tourism, should be seen in a different way than the one it usually seems to occupy in public discussion. It is not just as a means of making money or of having a good time. It is most definitely more than that – it is a primary means of discovering the world and its peoples, of understanding it and how we deal with it.

Travel and tourism offer what the other forms of discovery do not – the ability to see things for ourselves. How that happens and whether the results are good or bad depends on how they are organised, by whom and with what aims and objectives they have.

Done well it is a contribution to the quality of life. Such enrichment comes from information flowing through the four broad channels of personal contact at home, personal contacts gathered as a result of travelling; the media, and education. The schematic below illustrates this. Information obtained through these sources is interpreted by individuals in the light of their existing, accumulated experience, and it is then stored. Human memory is one form of storage, rich and dynamic but easy to decay. The artificial media such as paper, photos and electronic recordings last longer, though they are less dynamic and lack the multiple facets of memories.

The discussion concludes in "3D Media", accessed from the list at the left.

Enrichment channels, interpretation and storage
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