A purposeful framework for high-quality experiential learning
The Duke of Edinburgh’s International Award is a globally recognized, non‑competitive framework that supports young people ages 14–24 to set meaningful goals, reflect on their learning, and build transferable skills over time.
Bring the Award to your school: Get in touch hereAward Canada works with schools, school boards, and education systems to deliver the Award as a co‑curricular learning framework, embedding it within existing programs and experiential learning opportunities rather than adding new ones. Through goal‑setting, reflection, and evidence documented in the Online Record Book (ORB), educators gain a consistent way to support student growth, personalize learning, and track progress and outcomes across years.
How the Award Works Find Curriculum Integration Examples Grounded in Research & Expertise


Why Schools & Educators Choose the Award
The Award is a flexible, school‑ready framework that brings structure and purpose to experiential learning. It places students at the centre while supporting educator guidance and consistency across learning experiences.
Ready to bring the Award to your school?
Get started hereRead About Our Experiential Learning Framework in Action




The Globe and Mail Spotlights the Award in Canada
This feature highlights how the Award is more than an extracurricular activity; it’s a proven framework for developing resilience, leadership, and real-world skills. By integrating experiential learning into education, the Award helps students build confidence, embrace challenges, and prepare for life beyond the classroom.
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Bringing Experiential Learning to Life
At J.M. Olds Collegiate in Twillingate, NL experiential learning is part of everyday teaching. Joanne Mutford has integrated The Duke of Edinburgh’s International Award into Career’s curriculum so students can connect school learning goals with real experiences they care about.
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Small Shifts, Big Impact: Easier Award Delivery
What Award Centres are doing differently: Rather than running the Award only outside of regular schedules, many Centres are using existing class or program time to support participants. They aren’t adding more, they are using the moments that already bring young people together.
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Fanshawe College Becomes First Post-Secondary EOP in Co-curricular Approach
Fanshawe College is the first post-secondary institution in Canada to partner with Award Canada through its Co-curricular Approach to empower educators and students, beginning with Fanshawe’s Women in Skilled Trades Program, to build leadership, confidence, and purpose through experiential learning. Read more.
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Transforming Adolescent Development with Strength-Based Approaches
Award Canada’s position paper, Delivering Youth Development Outcomes the Award Canada Way, draws on leading developmental and neuroscience research to highlight a powerful truth: between the ages of 14 – 24, the experiences and influences that a young person has directly impact their long-term future, their aspirations and hopes, and more fundamentally, how their brain develops.
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Co-curricular Learning Thrives with Partner Support
Award Canada is grateful for the support of both corporate and education partners in advancing the Co-curricular Approach Pilot. Their contributions are essential in expanding access to experiential learning, helping young people in Canada build key life skills and prepare for future success.
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GECDSB Joins Award Canada's Co-curricular Pilot
A big welcome to the Greater Essex County District School Board (GECDSB) as an Award Canada Operating Partner! We’re excited to work alongside GECDSB educators to bring the Award’s experiential learning framework to students in their schools in Ontario.
Read moreIn the future, people will need far greater flexibility, resilience, capability, capacity to adjust, problem-solving and communication skills to deal with fast-changing times, constant innovation and ever more unpredictable circumstances. We have known this for some time, though perhaps many of us remain surprised, even shocked, at the pace it has come upon us.
Dr Howard Williamson Cvo Cbe Frsa Fhea, Professor Of European Youth Policy At The University Of South Wales. Trustee Of The Duke Of Edinburgh’s International Award Foundation

How does the Award work?
A Holistic Approach to Personal Development
The Award supports young people in building skills, confidence, and character across all areas of life. By balancing physical activity, service, skills development, and personal challenge, this approach encourages self awareness, resilience, and a strong sense of purpose.
Plan → Do → Review
Milestones are acknowledged to reinforce confidence, motivation, and follow-through. Recognition is part of the Award journey, helping students see progress and stay engaged over time. As students reach milestones, their learning and effort are acknowledged in meaningful ways, reinforcing confidence, motivation, and follow-through while supporting continued growth.


Students register and identify what they are working toward and why. Educators support goal setting connected to course or program outcomes, using the ORB as a portfolio tool from the start.


Students participate in real learning experiences through your school context. Schools define the experience; students personalize their goals and learning focus.


Students reflect on their learning and record evidence over time in the Online Record Book (ORB). Educators and assessors provide feedback, confirm progress, and support next steps through shared mentorship.
Co-curricular Award Integration Examples:




Career Education
Career Education, where students connect classroom learning and real‑world experiences to goal setting, reflection, and portfolio development
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Co‑operative Education
Supporting workplace learning through structured goal setting, reflection, and evidence of skill development
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Alternate and Special Education
Enabling personalized pathways that recognize individual progress and growth
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Leadership or school‑based programs
Where students plan, act, and reflect on meaningful responsibilities and initiatives.
Read more“The Duke of Edinburgh Award is an experiential reflection framework that brings coherence to how students plan, document, and make meaning of learning beyond the classroom.”
Bernadette Smith, Superintendent – Innovation and International Programs, Peel DSBBuilt on Research & Expertise
The Award’s co‑curricular approach was developed through evidence‑informed design and collaboration with education and youth‑development leaders across Canada. We are grateful to the individuals who contributed their expertise to ensure this model is practical, school‑ready, and aligned with system priorities. This approach is grounded in research demonstrating the impact of structured experiential and co‑curricular learning on youth development and student outcomes.
Because the Award is so prestigious, students were genuinely excited to realize that their everyday efforts are worthy of recognition. It helped reinforce that their learning is shaping them as people and supporting their personal goals. When learning feels important and relevant, students engage more deeply, and this Award has done exactly that.”
Joanne Mutford, NL Schools Teacher

Partner With Us
Our experiential learning framework is flexible, school-ready way to make experiential learning easier to plan, support, and track over time. Tell us what you are trying to strengthen in your school or board, and we will help map a co-curricular approach that fits your priorities and capacity. Not a school or school board? Visit Deliver the Award for general delivery partner information.


















