|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
How can opportunities for teaching and learning be improved to
ensure that many more people participate, gain qualifications and
obtain decent jobs? Will government policies enable us to achieve
these goals? What new ideas do we need to ensure a more inclusive,
equitable and efficient learning system? These are some of the main
concerns which underlie this thought-provoking book coming from a
major research project looking at how policies affect learners,
tutors, managers and institutional leaders in Further Education
Colleges, Adult and Community Learning centres and in Work Based
Learning sites. Post compulsory education in the UK has been
constantly restructured by the New Labour government and has been
subject to considerable policy turbulence over the last few years.
This book attempts to understand this important but poorly
understood sector by both talking to students and front-line staff
and by interviewing the officials responsible for managing
post-compulsory education and lifelong learning. By examining the
sector simultaneously from the 'bottom up' and from 'top down', the
authors show how recent policy is affecting three disadvantaged
groups - 16-19 year olds who have fared poorly in official tests at
school; unemployed adults learning basic skills; and employees at
work learning basic skills. The authors conclude that there are
serious failings and suggest principles and features of a more
equitable and effective learning system.
How can opportunities for teaching and learning be improved to
ensure that many more people participate, gain qualifications and
obtain decent jobs? Will government policies enable us to achieve
these goals? What new ideas do we need to ensure a more inclusive,
equitable and efficient learning system? These are some of the main
concerns which underlie this thought-provoking book coming from a
major research project looking at how policies affect learners,
tutors, managers and institutional leaders in Further Education
Colleges, Adult and Community Learning centres and in Work Based
Learning sites. Post compulsory education in the UK has been
constantly restructured by the New Labour government and has been
subject to considerable policy turbulence over the last few years.
This book attempts to understand this important but poorly
understood sector by both talking to students and front-line staff
and by interviewing the officials responsible for managing
post-compulsory education and lifelong learning. By examining the
sector simultaneously from the 'bottom up' and from 'top down', the
authors show how recent policy is affecting three disadvantaged
groups - 16-19 year olds who have fared poorly in official tests at
school; unemployed adults learning basic skills; and employees at
work learning basic skills. The authors conclude that there are
serious failings and suggest principles and features of a more
equitable and effective learning system.
|
|