Learning through experience
In the world of adult development, we often hear that people learn best by doing—but experiential learning takes that a step further. It’s not just about being active; it’s about intentional experience, followed by reflection, insight, and application.
What is experiential learning?
At its core, experiential learning is grounded in the idea that meaningful growth happens when individuals are placed in situations that challenge their assumptions, provoke curiosity, and invite self-awareness. These experiences - whether structured or spontaneous - serve as mirrors, helping people see how they show up in different contexts and explore new possibilities for how they might choose to lead, communicate, or collaborate.
As a facilitator, I bring a range of tactile tools - LEGO bricks, cards, coaching decks, and sometimes even ropes or paper planes! But truthfully, the magic rarely lies in the props, it lies in the conversations that follow: the moment someone realises they’ve just played out their default reaction to pressure, or sees how they habitually lead a group without asking first what others think. These insights don’t tend to come from a slide - they emerge from experience, if we’re paying attention.
So, what makes experiential learning so powerful?
It invites people to step out of theory and into real behaviour.
It highlights the gap between intention and impact.
It fosters emotional engagement, not just intellectual understanding.
It creates a space where people feel safe enough to take risks - and learn from the results.
Most importantly, it encourages reflection - the crucial, often missing ingredient in many traditional training approaches. Without reflection, experience can simply become repetition. With reflection, experience becomes learning.
Here are a few questions to help you reflect on your own learning experiences:
When was the last time you truly learned something about yourself through an experience, not a theory?
In moments of group work or leadership, what behaviours do you tend to default to under pressure?
How open are you to feedback in the moment - and what helps you stay open?
Think of a time when you supported someone else's growth. What made the experience meaningful - for them and for you?
Where in your work (or life) would you benefit from experimenting with a new behaviour or perspective?
Why experiential learning transforms development
Experiential learning is not a one-off technique. It’s a mindset - a way of approaching leadership development with curiosity, humility, and courage. At andrea-omahony.com, we create experiences that are deliberately crafted, emotionally resonant, and ultimately transformative.
If you’re looking to breathe life into your development programmes, get in touch. Let’s design something that’s felt, not just taught.
Please get in touch or book a 15-minute discovery session here.