Adult education
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Adult education is the practice of teaching and educating adults. This is often done in the workplace or through 'extension' or 'continuing education' courses at secondary schools, or at a college or university. Other learning places include folk high schools, community colleges, and lifelong learning centres. The practice is also often referred to as 'Training and Development'. It has also been referred to as andragogy (to distinguish it from pedagogy). A difference is made between vocational education, mostly done in workplaces and mostly related to upskilling, and non-formal adult education, that can include learning skills or learning for personal development.
Educating adults differs from educating children in several ways. One of the most important differences is that adults have accumulated knowledge and experience that can either add value to a learning experience or hinder it.
Another important difference is that adults frequently must apply their knowledge in some practical fashion to learn effectively; there must be a goal and a reasonable expectation that the new knowledge will help them further that goal. One example, common in the 1990s, was the proliferation of computer training courses in which adults (not children or adolescents), most of whom were office workers, could enroll. These courses would teach basic use of the operating system or specific application software. Because the abstractions governing the user's interactions with a PC were so new, many people who had been working white-collar jobs for 10 years or more eventually took such training courses, either at their own whim (to gain computer skills and thus earn higher pay) or at the behest of their managers.
In the United States, a more general example is that of the high-school dropout who returns to school to complete general education requirements. Most upwardly-mobile positions require at the very least a high school diploma or equivalent. A working adult is unlikely to have the freedom to simply quit their job and go "back to school" full time. Community colleges and correspondence schools usually offer evening or weekend classes for this reason. In the U.S.A., the equivalent of the high school diploma earned by an adult through these programs is to pass the General Education Development (GED) test.
Another fast-growing sector of adult education is English for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL), also referred to as English as a Second Language (ESL). These courses are key in assisting immigrants with not only the acquisition of the English language, but the acclimation process to the culture of the United States.
[edit] See also
Preschool → | Kindergarten → | Primary → | Middle → | Secondary → | ————— Post-secondary ————— | ||
Vocational education | —— Higher education —— | ||||||
Undergraduate → | Postgraduate | ||||||
Also: Early childhood education, Alternative education (Homeschooling), Adult education |
- Adult high school
- Folk high school in Scandinavia and Germany
- Community college in Canada and the United States
- Community Education in Scotland
- Continuing education
- Distance learning
- E-learning
- Lifelong learning
[edit] External links
- International Council for Adult Education (ICAE)
- European Association for the Education of Adults (EAEA)
- Lifelong Learning Laboratory
- Nightcourses.com Ireland's leading resource for information about adult education, further learning, and evening classes
- The National Institute of Adult Continuing Education (NIACE, UK)
- The National Research and Development Centre for Adult Literacy and Numeracy (NRDC, UK)
- Working with Adult Learners in the Library Classroom: A Personal Reflection
jp:成人教育