Equine-Assisted Experiential Learning: A Literature Review of Embodied Leadership Development in Organizational Behavior
Abstract
<b>Background</b>: Equine-assisted experiential learning (EAL) is an emerging approach that uses human–horse interactions to develop leadership skills through experiential methods. <b>Purpose</b>: This review synthesizes the literature on the role of EAL in developing leadership competencies and explores its implications for workplace learning. <b>Design/methodology/approach</b>: A narrative review was conducted examining empirical studies and theoretical frameworks on EAL and leadership development. <b>Findings/Conclusions</b>: Recent studies show EAL improves self-awareness, emotional intelligence, nonverbal communication, trust building, adaptability, and problem solving. These competencies are fostered through activities such as ground-based exercises, join-up techniques, and trust-building tasks, which require congruence between intention and action. Participants report behavioral changes such as improved empathy, clarity under pressure, and team cohesion. These align with core management skills for organizational performance. <b>Implications</b>: EAL complements traditional leadership training by developing relational and embodied leadership skills, including trust building, adaptability, and emotional intelligence, which contribute to organizational resilience and sustainable growth.
Date
01-07-2025Author
Rubentheran Sivagurunathan
Abdul Rahman bin S Senathirajah
Linkesvaran Sivagurunathan
Sayeeduzzafar Qazi
Rasheedul Haque