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Path: Home > Book Shop > A > Adult learning, critical intelligence...
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Adult learning, critical intelligence and social change

Marjorie Mayo and Jane Thompson eds.
ISBN 1 87294 161 3
1995
£19.95   (US$38.00  €32.00) [excludes P&P]
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Adult learning, social change book cover

What lies beyond the current preoccupation with education and its relationship to economic growth? Has the idea of community engagement in the mixed economy of welfare through a radical, critical form of participative learning disappeared, or is it re-emerging in a different form?

Adult Learning, Critical Intelligence and Social Change offers a wide range of perspectives on these and other issues which have emerged since the 1980s. In the last 15 years, adult education has been subjected to restructuring around the promotion of market forces, moving away from the agenda of education for transformation towards a narrower agenda of meeting vocational needs. In the process, it has become demonstrably less neutral and more overtly controversial, more vital than ever in providing essential skills and knowledge and in developing alternative visions for democratic social change. This book reviews the context of these developments and focuses on contemporary debates in workplace and community based adult education and the impact of NVQs, competence based approaches and APL on women and ethnic minority communities. Individual essays illustrate critical and dynamic approaches to adult learning, providing examples of commitment and progressive perspectives in practice, in Britain and beyond.

The book opens with a critical review of the context for these changes and of the theoretical debates which attempt to analyse and explain them. The chapters which follow offer specific challenges to postmodernism in relation to adult learning, and focus more generally on critical debates around culture and theory. Developments in trade union education, women’s education and vocational education are considered in depth.

Both as an expert overview of developments since 1980 and as a source of inspiration for a more progressive agenda, this collection will appeal to students and practitioners in all forms of adult education.

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Contents

Preface Jane Thompson
Chapter 1. Adult education for change in the nineties and beyond: towards a critical review of the changing context Marjorie Mayo
Part 1. Rooting and reconstituting the radical tradition
Chapter 2. Challenging the post-modern condition: radical adult education for critical intelligence Paula Allman and John Wallis
Chapter 3. Are we not more than half the nation? Women and 'the radical tradition' of adult education, 1867-1919 Julia Swindells
Chapter 4. Cultural struggle or identity politics: can there still be a 'popular' education? Tom Steele
Chapter 5. Radical adult education: the reader and the self Hilda Kean
Chapter 6. Piecing together the fragments: thoughts on adult education in a vanished era Martin Yarnit
Chapter 7. Competence, curriculum and democracy David Alexander and Ian Martin
Chapter 8. Really useful knowledge: adult education and the Ruskin learning project Katherine Hughes
Part 2. Contemporary debates and current developments
Chapter 9. All equal now? Rebecca O'Rourke
Chapter 10. Feminism and women's education Jane Thompson
Chapter 11. Making experience count... towards what? Wilma Fraser
Chapter 12. The dying of the light? A radical look at trade union education John McIlroy
Chapter 13. Learning in working life: the contribution of trade unions Keith Forrester
Chapter 14. Popular education and the state: a new look at the community debate Keith Jackson
Chapter 15. Beyond subversion Mae Shaw and Jim Crowther
Chapter 16. Training the community: the case of tenant training John Grayson
Chapter 17. Seizing the quality initiative: regeneration and the radical project Cilla Ross
Chapter 18. Amman Valley Enterprise: a case study of adult education and community revival Sonia Reynolds
Chapter 19. Formal systems: working from within Chris Duke
Chapter 20. Adult learning in the context of global, neo-liberal economic policies John Payne
Chapter 21. Popular education in Northern Ireland: the Ulster People's College Tom Lovett
Notes on contributors

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Reviews

‘….it is good to see adult educators still arguing with energy for a radical agenda…all adult educators should dip into this book. You may not agree with it, but it will make you think.’
(FE Now)

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