Fr. 70.00

Making Space - Merging Theory and Practice in Adult Education

English · Paperback / Softback

Shipping usually within 3 to 5 weeks

Description

Read more










Representative of a wide range of adult education and lifelong learning frameworks and experiences, this book gives voice to emerging perspectives and offers thought-provoking critiques of established practices and accepted theories. Those in the adult education academy, as well as other voices often excluded from the discourse in adult education, offer critiques of the social, political, economic, and historical forms of hegemony in the discipline. They analyze the ways in which these hegemonic norms and practices have affected adult learning environments and the participation rates of varying groups and shed light on how adult education as a field of practice can marginalize individuals based on their ethnicity, race, gender, class, language, age, or sexual orientation. These critiques provide a powerful statement about silence, invisibility, and the marginalization of the other, and suggest that adult educators may complicitly, if not implicitly, marginalize adult learners.

This book will provide professors and students, adult literacy teachers, corporate trainers, community-based organizers, and others with alternative ways to think about adult education practice, adult learners, and the multiple, intersecting realities that influence the teaching/learning transaction. In so doing, this book provides practitioners and academicians with a forum to dialog about emerging theories and practices, and through the discourse they can begin to merge theories and practices through language that is accessible and inclusive.

List of contents










Foreword: The Beginning: A Response by Phyllis Cunningham
Deconstructing Exclusion and Inclusion in AE
Opening the Gates: Reflections on Power: Hegemony, Language, and the Status Quo by Peggy A. Sissel and Vanessa Sheared
Incorporating Postmodernist Perspectives into Adult Education by David F. Hemphill
Challenging Adult Learning: A Feminist Perspective by Daniele D. Flannery and Elizabeth Hayes
Talking about Whiteness: Adult Learning Principles and the Invisible Norm by Sue Shore
An Invisible Presence, Silenced Voices: African-Americans in the Adult Education Professoriate by Sherwood E. Smith and Scipio A.J. Colin III
History Revisited and Claimed
African-American Market Woman: Her Past, Our Future by Cheryl Smith
Creating an Intellectual Basis for Friendship: Practice and Politics in a White, Women's Study Group by Jane M. Hugo
Northern Philanthropy's Idealogical Influence on African-American Adult Education in the Rural South by Bernadine S. Chapman
Struggling to Learn, Learning to Struggle: Workers, Workplace Learning, and the Emergence of Human Resource Development by Fred Schied
The Role of Adult Education in Workplace Ageism by Su-fen Liu and Frances Rees
Classrooms and/or Communities: Contexts, Questions, and Critiques
Communities in the Classroom: Critical Reflections on Adult Education in an Appalachian Community by Mary Beth Bingman and Connie White, with Amelia R.B. Kirby
Education, Incarceration, and the Marginalization of Women by Irene C. Baird
Adult Basic Education: Equipped for the Future or for Failure? by Donna Amstutz
Teaching as Political Practice by Ruth Bounous
Cultural Infusion: Reflections on Identity and Practice
African-American Women of Inspiration by Angela Humphrey Brown
Through the Eyes of a Latina: Professional Women in Adult Education by Rosita Lopez Marcano
By My Own Eyes: A Story of Learning and Culture by Lynette Harper and "Mira"
Using Queer Cultural Studies to Transgress Adult Educational Space by André P. Grace
Feminist Perspectives on Adult Education: Constantly Shifting Identities in Constantly Changing Times by Elizabeth J. Tisdell
Reconstructing the Field: Our Personal and Collective Identities
Between a Rock and a Hard Place: Confronting Who `We' Are by Merilyn Childs
Technologies of Learning at Work: Disciplining the Self by John Garrick and Nicky Solomon
The Political Economy of Adult Education Implications for Practice by Jorge Jeria
What Does Research, Resistance, and Inclusion Mean for Adult Education Practice? A Reflective Response by Vanessa Sheared and Peggy A. Sissel


About the author










VANESSA SHEARED is Associate Dean in the College of Education at San Francisco State University, where she has been actively involved in working with both public, community-based, and higher education programs./e She served on the Board of Directors of the American Association for Adult and Continuing Education Conference for five years.

PEGGY A. SISSEL was formerly Associate Professor at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock./e She was a former member of the Commission of Professors in Adult Education Board of Directors.


Product details

Assisted by Vanessa Sheared (Editor), Sheared Vanessa (Editor), Peggy A. Sissel (Editor), Sissel Peggy A. (Editor)
Publisher Bloomsbury
 
Languages English
Age Recommendation ages 7 to 17
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 30.06.2001
 
EAN 9780897896016
ISBN 978-0-89789-601-6
No. of pages 376
Weight 567 g
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Education > Adult education

Cultural Studies, EDUCATION / Adult & Continuing Education, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social, Adult education, continuous learning, Current Events and Issues: Education

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.