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This work brings together articles and papers by union leaders, activists, social scientists, and educators to provide an overview of the field of worker education. Along with presenting the major historical models of worker education, the book addresses the present issues confronting worker educators today. The book's final sections present alternative models of worker education that illustrate a variety of approaches currently being employed. All selections found in this volume represent original contributions not published elsewhere.
The first section of the book considers the field of worker education from four levels of social determinism: institutional, ideological, pedagogical, and personal. The second part focuses on three historical stages of worker education. The articles cover the early radical phase of worker education, the period of union-university cooperation, and the current, dominant union-sponsored model of worker education. The third section considers issues which have risen from worker education's history, institutional configurations, and worker education's place in modern American society. The final section of the book presents evaluations of working alternatives to the dominant models of worker education. The authors not only discuss specific programs and institutions, but they do so in the context of the historical models outlined in the first two sections and the issues raised in Part 3. This book will be of value to students of the social science and education disciplines, adult and labor educators, trade unionists, and others interested in this burgeoning field.
List of contents
Foreword by Joseph S. Murphy
Introduction
Overview of the Field of Worker EducationLabor Education: A Growth Sector in a Stagnant Industry by Everette J. Freeman and Dale G. Brickner
The New Labor Education: A Return to Ideology by Stanley Aronwitz
Worker Education: Developing an Approach to Worker Empowerment by Gregory Mantsios
The Modes of Worker Education: An Insider's View by Gus Tyler
Historical Models of Worker EducationUnion-based Labor Education: Lessons from the ILGWU by Elvira R. Tarr
Brookwood Labor College by Jonathan D. Bloom
The Wayne State University Institute of Industrial Relations: Worker Education Was Not Meant to Be by Michael Kahan
Labor Education and the AFL-CIO by Carolyn J. Jacobson
Current Issues in Worker EducationWorker Education and Building the Union Movement by Steven H. London
Corporate Responses to the Demand for a High-Tech Workforce by Brent Andrew
High-Tech Skills: The Latest Corporate Assault on Workers by Douglas D. Noble
Worker Education and Education Reform of the Sixties by Gretchen L. Johnson
Information as a Political Resource in the Age of Worker Education by Ronald Berkman
Re-educating the U.S. Working Class on Race and Class by Gerald Horne
Racism, Male Chauvinism, and Worker Education by Joseph F. Wilson
Alternative Models for Worker EducationThe Consortium for Worker Education: The Possibilities and Constraints for Union-based Schooling by Sheila D. Collins
Worker Education in Western Europe by Rita Bladt
Putting Working People Back at the Center of U.S. History by Stephen Brier
Toward a Transformative Model of Worker Education: A Freirean Perspective by Elsa Auerbach
Sophocles Comes to the Supermarket: Worker-Students and Higher Education by Leonard Kriegel
Promises, Promises, Promises: An Education for Working Adults at Empire State College by Sylvain Nagler
Bread and Roses: A Cultural Model of Worker Education by Moe Foner
Bibliographical Essay
Index
About the author
STEVEN H. LONDON is Professor of Political Science at Brooklyn College and teaches at the Graduate Center for Worker Education at Brooklyn College, City University of New York.
ELVIRA R. TARR is Professor of Education at Brooklyn College, City University of New York.
JOSEPH F. WILSON is Professor of Political Science at Brooklyn College and teaches at the Graduate Center for Worker Education at Brooklyn College, City University of New York.