Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables and figures
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- one Contemporary policies for a learning society
- two Lifelong learning trajectories
- three History, place and the learning society: the case of South Wales
- four Patterns of individual participation in adult learning
- five Families and the formation of learner identities
- six Lifelong learning trajectories and the two dimensions of change over time
- seven The role of informal learning
- eight The learning society and the economic imperative
- nine The impact of policies to widen participation
- ten The prospects for a learning society
- References
- Appendix: The research sites
- Index
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 January 2022
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables and figures
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- one Contemporary policies for a learning society
- two Lifelong learning trajectories
- three History, place and the learning society: the case of South Wales
- four Patterns of individual participation in adult learning
- five Families and the formation of learner identities
- six Lifelong learning trajectories and the two dimensions of change over time
- seven The role of informal learning
- eight The learning society and the economic imperative
- nine The impact of policies to widen participation
- ten The prospects for a learning society
- References
- Appendix: The research sites
- Index
Summary
Lifelong learning is a topic that is most often addressed by both policy makers and academics using rhetoric and normative critique, rather than empirical evidence and systematic analysis. In this book, we set out to redress the balance by presenting – hopefully in an accessible form – the results of a large-scale study of patterns of lifelong participation in learning, the social and economic determinants of these patterns, and their impacts on social exclusion. This evidence provides us with the basis to evaluate alternative policy strategies for lifelong learning at national, regional and local levels. Rooting policy development in rigorous research seems to us essential if we are to achieve a truly learning society.
Accordingly, this book is based on a wide variety of empirical evidence, mostly stemming from a project entitled Patterns of participation in adult education and training, which was completed between 1996-99 as part of the Economic and Social Research Council's (ESRC’s) ‘Learning Society’ programme. This project was based on our previous theoretical and empirical work, in the areas of work-based learning and vocational education and training, transitions from school to work, and the creation of learner identities. The data sources used in the study include: a large-scale household survey of the learning experiences of around 2,500 people aged 16-65; in-depth interviews with a sub-sample of 110 of these respondents; analysis of historical archives; interviews with education and training providers; and analysis of a variety of secondary statistical sources.
The results of this study are supplemented by the findings of further work we have done in separate projects on learning regions, the policy of setting National Targets for Lifelong Learning and the use of information and communications technology to extend participation in adult learning, by means of initiatives such as the University for Industry (UfI).
These various projects have generated a significant number of academic publications, written primarily to present our findings, to develop social scientific theory, or to explain our methodological strategies. However, this book is new in that it brings together and makes explicit for the first time the policy implications of our research; and in doing so, uses a large quantity of previously unpublished material. Shorn of complex methodological considerations, the book is therefore aimed at those involved in shaping and working with policies for lifelong learning.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Creating a Learning Society?Learning Careers and Policies for Lifelong Learning, pp. vii - xPublisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2002