Outdoor education — using natural environments for structured learning and development — encompasses school camping programmes, adventure sports education, environmental education, wilderness therapy, and experiential learning. Outdoor education organisations and schools need funding for programmes, equipment, and facilities. This guide covers the key funding sources in Australia.
Outdoor education sits at the intersection of multiple funding sectors:
- Education: School curriculum enrichment, student wellbeing
- Sport and recreation: Adventure sports development
- Environment: Environmental education and conservation
- Health and mental health: Nature-based wellbeing, adventure therapy
- Youth development: Leadership, resilience, character
This cross-sector positioning opens multiple funding pathways.
State education departments are the primary funders for school outdoor education:
- Victoria: Department of Education — camp schools (Outdoor Education Group), state-owned camp facilities
- NSW: Department of Education — outdoor learning and camps
- Queensland: Department of Education — outdoor and environmental education
- WA, SA, Tasmania: State education departments fund outdoor education as part of curriculum
Funding model: Most school outdoor education is funded through school budgets (capitation funding), supplemented by parent contributions. Schools with disadvantaged students may access supplementary equity funding for outdoor experiences.
Adventure sports are part of the state sport and recreation portfolio:
- Victoria: Sport and Recreation Victoria — outdoor recreation
- NSW: Office of Sport — outdoor education and adventure activities
- Queensland: State sport agencies — outdoor recreation
- WA: DLGSC — outdoor recreation development
Outdoor Council of Australia (OCA): Peak body for outdoor recreation — advocacy and some programme funding.
Outdoors WA: Western Australian outdoor recreation peak — some funding for member organisations.
State outdoor recreation peaks in each state provide resources and some programme support.
Outdoor education organisations that are incorporated not-for-profits can access:
- NSW ClubGRANTS: Community programmes including outdoor education
- State gaming trusts: Community wellbeing and youth programmes
Outdoor education intersects with mental health:
- Youth mental health funders: Nature-based mental health programmes
- Headspace: Youth wellbeing, sometimes outdoor components
- Beyond Blue: Mental health grants, including nature-based wellbeing
Adventure therapy — structured therapeutic use of outdoor activities — accesses mental health sector funding.
Outdoor education with environmental content accesses conservation and environment funding:
- State environmental agencies: Environmental education grants
- Conservation foundations: Connecting young people with nature
- Schools Tree Day / Landcare: Outdoor environmental education activities
Outdoor education's character development outcomes appeal to youth funders:
- Community foundations: Youth development programmes
- Rotary and Lions: Youth development grants
- Duke of Edinburgh: Formal outdoor adventure-based programme
- Scouts and Guides: Adventure-based youth development
Outdoor education equipment:
- Camping and shelter equipment (tents, sleeping systems)
- Climbing and abseiling gear
- Kayaks, canoes, and water equipment
- First aid and safety equipment
- Navigation tools (compasses, GPS)
- Cooking equipment for multi-day programmes
Gaming trusts and state sport agencies fund equipment for community outdoor education providers.
Adaptive outdoor education for people with disability:
- Disability sport funders: Inclusive outdoor recreation
- NDIS: Participants may fund their own participation in some outdoor education
- Community foundations: Inclusive outdoor experiences for young people with disability
Strong outdoor education applications demonstrate:
- Target participants: Who benefits? School groups, at-risk youth, disability, disadvantaged communities?
- Learning outcomes: What do participants gain? (Resilience, teamwork, environmental connection)
- Safety standards: Appropriate qualifications, risk management, instructor ratios
- Environmental responsibility: Leave No Trace, minimal impact, conservation values
- School or community connections: Partnership with schools or community organisations
- Cost access: How is the programme affordable for lower-income participants?
- Evidence: What does research or previous experience say about outcomes?
Tahua's grants management platform helps outdoor education organisations manage their grant applications, track equipment and programme funding, and demonstrate the wellbeing and learning outcomes that funders value.