University continuing education, 1981-2006 : twenty-five turbulent years

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

University continuing education, 1981-2006 : twenty-five turbulent years

edited by Bill Jones, Russell Moseley, Geoffrey Thomas

NIACE, c2010

Available at  / 3 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes bibliographical references

"UALL, Universities Association for Lifelong Learning"

"This book is the product of a UALL initiative,..."--Pref.

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Over the last 25 years university continuing education departments have come under unprecedented threat, with many closing or changing beyond recognition. Yet this has occurred over the same period that their central values of social equity, accessibility and learner engagement are at the heart of the current rhetoric of wider and more inclusive participation in higher education. This book explores the many changes in continuing education from 1981-2006, including case studies of individual departments, and the role of the Universities Association for Lifelong Learning. This book is timely for two reasons; as the old continuing education tradition disappears, its story should be told, and, equally importantly, the driving principles of the university adult education system have a valuable contribution to make in informing future strategy and policy in higher education lifelong learning.

Table of Contents

  • Contributors
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgements
  • Glossary
  • Chapter 1: Introduction: University continuing education 1981-2006
  • Chapter 2: University adult education: The first century
  • Chapter 3: University adult education and the shift to mass higher education
  • Chapter 4: The impact on university continuing education departments
  • Chapter 5: The role of the Universities Association for Lifelong Learning
  • Chapter 6: University continuing education: changing concepts and perceptions
  • Chapter 7: Vocationalism and the rise of continuing vocational education
  • Case study 1: Lifelong learning at Cardiff University
  • Case study 2: University of Glasgow, Department of Adult Continuing Education
  • Case study 3: Adult and continuing education at the university of Leeds
  • Case study 4: Lifelong learning at the University of Leicester
  • Case study 5: Adult and continuing education at the University of Liverpool
  • Case study 6: Continuing education at Oxford
  • Case study 7: Lifelong learning at the University of Sheffield
  • Case study 8: Lifelong learning at the University of Warwick
  • Chapter 8: The future of university continuing education: lessons from this study
  • Afterword

by "Nielsen BookData"

Details

Page Top