![]() |
![]() |
Your cart is empty |
||
Showing 1 - 6 of 6 matches in All Departments
Adult education has never been more important or urgent than it is today Few educators have had the impact on adult education of Griff Foley. Professor Peter McLaren, University of California, Los Angeles This timely and valuable book makes an important contribution to our understanding of key recent developments in adult education and their significance. Reflecting the increasingly global nature of scholarship in the field, well-respected international contributors analyse issues facing practitioners today, and consider how these can be most positively embraced to further the international cause of adult learning and social justice. Janet Hannah, University of NottinghamLearning is central to all aspects of human life, and failure to learn brings dire consequences. As our world becomes more integrated and complex, adult learning has become more important. Dimensions of Adult Learning offers a broad overview of adult learning in the workplace and community. Written by a team of international experts, it introduces the core skills and knowledge which underpin effective practice. It examines adult education policy and research, and highlights the social nature of adult learning. It also examines adult learning in different contexts: on-line learning, problem-based learning, organisational and vocational learning. Dimensions of Adult Learning is an essential reference for professionals and students.Griff Foley is Research Associate in Adult Education at the University of Technology, Sydney. He is author of Learning in Social Action and Strategic Learning.
'This is an impressive book that will be of wide interest to adult educators everywhere.Many of the book's contributors work at the University of Technology, Sydney - surely the world's pre-eminent institution for the study of adult learning, and the most open and generous location for debate. Its virtues are the book's.'Alan Tuckett, National Institute of Adult Continuing Education, UK'I am happy to endorse this book enthusiastically as being appropriate for a North American audience of adult educators.Though it's an intentionally introductory survey, it never talks down to readers, never condescends. On the other hand, it's not so intenationally erudite that it collagpses into theoretical posturing; it stays firmly grounded in and connected to practice.'Stephen Brookfield, University of St. Thomas, USAUnderstanding Adult Education and Training offers a broad overview of the field for adult educators and workplace trainers. It introduces the keys issues, debates and theories in a way which is relevant to practice. Its aim is to deepen readers' understanding of adult learning and education so that they can be better practitioners.Adult education is a diverse field so there is no single body of knowledge which is appropriate for all adult educators. Understanding Adult Education and Training introduces a wide range of formal theory from adult education and associated fields, and shows readers how they can use it their own circumstances.The first edition of this book has become a standard reference for students and professionals in Australia. This edition is fully revised and updated for an international readership.
'This is an impressive book that will be of wide interest to adult educators everywhere.Many of the book's contributors work at the University of Technology, Sydney - surely the world's pre-eminent institution for the study of adult learning, and the most open and generous location for debate. Its virtues are the book's.' Alan Tuckett, National Institute of Adult Continuing Education, UK 'I am happy to endorse this book enthusiastically as being appropriate for a North American audience of adult educators.Though it's an intentionally introductory survey, it never talks down to readers, never condescends. On the other hand, it's not so intenationally erudite that it collagpses into theoretical posturing; it stays firmly grounded in and connected to practice.' Stephen Brookfield, University of St. Thomas, USA Understanding Adult Education and Training offers a broad overview of the field for adult educators and workplace trainers. It introduces the keys issues, debates and theories in a way which is relevant to practice. Its aim is to deepen readers' understanding of adult learning and education so that they can be better practitioners. Adult education is a diverse field so there is no single body of knowledge which is appropriate for all adult educators. Understanding Adult Education and Training introduces a wide range of formal theory from adult education and associated fields, and shows readers how they can use it their own circumstances. The first edition of this book has become a standard reference for students and professionals in Australia. This edition is fully revised and updated for an international readership.
This book seeks to increase our understanding of those
non-educational contexts and informal circumstances in which people
learn. Adult educators, Professor Foley argues, ought not to
neglect the importance of the incidental learning which can take
place, in particular, when people become involved in voluntary
organisations, social struggles, and political activity of every
kind. In developing the argument that such involvement can provide
extraordinarily powerful learning opportunities, he uses case
studies from the United States of America, Australia as well as
Third World countries - Brazil and Zimbabwe - and embracing very
diverse environmental, women's, worker and political struggles. He
is particularly interested in how involvement in social action can
help people to unlearn dominant, oppressive ideologies and
discourses and learn instead oppositional, liberatory ones, even if
such processes of emancipatory learning are inevitably complex and
contradictory. He relates these processes of informal learning in
contested contexts to current thinking in adult education and
points the way to a somewhat different, and more radical, agenda in
adult education theory and practice.
Adult education has never been more important or urgent than it is today Few educators have had the impact on adult education of Griff Foley. Professor Peter McLaren, University of California, Los Angeles This timely and valuable book makes an important contribution to our understanding of key recent developments in adult education and their significance. Reflecting the increasingly global nature of scholarship in the field, well-respected international contributors analyse issues facing practitioners today, and consider how these can be most positively embraced to further the international cause of adult learning and social justice. Janet Hannah, University of Nottingham Learning is central to all aspects of human life, and failure to learn brings dire consequences. As our world becomes more integrated and complex, adult learning has become more important. Dimensions of Adult Learning offers a broad overview of adult learning in the workplace and community. Written by a team of international experts, it introduces the core skills and knowledge which underpin effective practice. It examines adult education policy and research, and highlights the social nature of adult learning. It also examines adult learning in different contexts: on-line learning, problem-based learning, organisational and vocational learning. Dimensions of Adult Learning is an essential reference for professionals and students. Griff Foley is Research Associate in Adult Education at the University of Technology, Sydney. He is author of Learning in Social Action and Strategic Learning.
This book seeks to increase our understanding of those
non-educational contexts and informal circumstances in which people
learn. Adult educators, Professor Foley argues, ought not to
neglect the importance of the incidental learning which can take
place, in particular, when people become involved in voluntary
organisations, social struggles, and political activity of every
kind. In developing the argument that such involvement can provide
extraordinarily powerful learning opportunities, he uses case
studies from the United States of America, Australia as well as
Third World countries - Brazil and Zimbabwe - and embracing very
diverse environmental, women's, worker and political struggles. He
is particularly interested in how involvement in social action can
help people to unlearn dominant, oppressive ideologies and
discourses and learn instead oppositional, liberatory ones, even if
such processes of emancipatory learning are inevitably complex and
contradictory. He relates these processes of informal learning in
contested contexts to current thinking in adult education and
points the way to a somewhat different, and more radical, agenda in
adult education theory and practice.
|
![]() ![]() You may like...
Incarceration and Generation, Volume I…
Silvia Gomes, Maria Joao Leote De Carvalho, …
Hardcover
R3,400
Discovery Miles 34 000
Transactions of the Zoological Society…
Zoological Society of London
Paperback
R715
Discovery Miles 7 150
Of Mice, Men, and Microbes - Hantavirus
David R. Harper, Andrea S. Meyer
Hardcover
R1,359
Discovery Miles 13 590
Trinity College London Piano Exam Pieces…
Trinity College London
Paperback
R261
Discovery Miles 2 610
Brain Machine Interfaces for Space…
Luca Rossini, Dario Izzo
Hardcover
R5,145
Discovery Miles 51 450
Black Beach - 491 Days In One Of…
Daniel Janse Van Rensburg, Tracey Pharoah
Paperback
|