Representative of a wide range of adult education and lifelong
learning frameworks and experiences, this book gives voice to
emerging perspectives and offers thought-provoking critiques of
established practices and accepted theories. Those in the adult
education academy, as well as other voices often excluded from the
discourse in adult education, offer critiques of the social,
political, economic, and historical forms of hegemony in the
discipline. They analyze the ways in which these hegemonic norms
and practices have affected adult learning environments and the
participation rates of varying groups and shed light on how adult
education as a field of practice can marginalize individuals based
on their ethnicity, race, gender, class, language, age, or sexual
orientation. These critiques provide a powerful statement about
silence, invisibility, and the marginalization of the other, and
suggest that adult educators may complicitly, if not implicitly,
marginalize adult learners.
This book will provide professors and students, adult literacy
teachers, corporate trainers, community-based organizers, and
others with alternative ways to think about adult education
practice, adult learners, and the multiple, intersecting realities
that influence the teaching/learning transaction. In so doing, this
book provides practitioners and academicians with a forum to dialog
about emerging theories and practices, and through the discourse
they can begin to merge theories and practices through language
that is accessible and inclusive.
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