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Developing Adult Learning for Active Citizenship: A New Dimension of University LLL

Developing Adult Learning for Active Citizenship: A New Dimension of University LLL. Dr. Balázs Németh Regional Lifelong Learning Research Centre University of Pécs nemethb@feek.pte.hu. B. Németh – Erasmus Exchange – September, 2012. De finitions. Adult Learning Active Citizenship

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Developing Adult Learning for Active Citizenship: A New Dimension of University LLL

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  1. Developing Adult Learning for Active Citizenship: A New Dimensionof University LLL Dr. Balázs Németh Regional Lifelong Learning Research Centre University of Pécs nemethb@feek.pte.hu B. Németh – Erasmus Exchange – September, 2012

  2. Definitions Adult Learning Active Citizenship Lifelong Learning University Lifelong Learning B. Németh – Erasmus Exchange – September, 2012

  3. Adult Learning „Adult learning is a vital component of lifelong learning. Definitions of adult learning vary, but for the purpose of this Communication it is defined as all forms of learning undertaken by adults after having left initial education and training, however far this process may have gone (e.g., including tertiary education).” European Commission - COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION Adult learning: It is never too late to learn Brussels, 23.10.2006 COM(2006) 614 final p. 2. B. Németh – Erasmus Exchange – September, 2012

  4. Adult Learning Main Challenges (for HEIs too*) Key Messages (Role for HEIs*) - Competitiveness* - Lifting the barries to participation* - Demographic Changes* - Ensuring the quality of adult learning* Social Inclusion* - Recognition and validation of learning outcome* - Investing in the ageing population and migrants*(?) - Indicators and benchmarks* Why no word on active citizenship? European Commission COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION Adult learning: It is never too late to learn Brussels, 23.10.2006 COM(2006) 614 final B. Németh – Erasmus Exchange – September, 2012

  5. Active citizenship No single definition of active citizenship; Active citizenship is an open-ended process (H. Baert, 2003, 2006); Citizenship education and the building of collective - multiple identities (T. Jansen, 2003); Raising participation in social, political and economic activities (UNESCO 1998, 2001); Part of the learning city – learning region model (Longworth, 2003, 2006); Contradiction in between employability leading to citizenship and the desire to be an active citizen (Jarvis, 2004) Organisational and community development through higher education (OECD, 2007; NIACE, 2008) B. Németh – Erasmus Exchange – September, 2012

  6. Active citizenship Learning about citizenship; - Learning about citizenship as status Learning through citizenship; - Refelection on experiences(practice) of individual and collective citizenship Learning for citizenship. - Active citizenship Johnston, R ( 2005.) A Framework for Developing Adult Learning for Active Citizenship In: Wildemeersch, D. – Stroobants, V. – Bron Jr., M. (eds.) Active Citizenship and Multiple Identities Peter Lang, Frankfurt am Main, p. 49. B. Németh – Erasmus Exchange – September, 2012

  7. Active citizenship Johnston, R ( 2005.) A Framework for Developing Adult Learning for Active Citizenship In: Wildemeersch, D. – Stroobants, V. – Bron Jr., M. (eds.) Active Citizenship and Multiple Identities Peter Lang, Frankfurt am Main, p. 62. B. Németh – Erasmus Exchange – September, 2012

  8. Citizenship related to rights (civil, political and social) and participation; • Active citizenship is about conscious practice of rights and recognition of status; • Challenge: redefinition of democratic citizenship, social responsibility at risk; • Having to ballance between individual freedom and collective interest – role of participatory competencies. Active citizenship H. Baert: Reconstructing Active Citizenship. In: Schmidt-Lauff, S. (ed.) (2003) Adult Education and Lifelong Learning. Verlag Kovac, Berlin. Pp. 55-69. B. Németh – Erasmus Exchange – September, 2012

  9. Active citizenship H. Baert: Civic Learning and Active Citizenship (2006) Conference on Adult Learning, Competence and Active Citizenship, Espoo 3.-4.10.2006 B. Németh – Erasmus Exchange – September, 2012

  10. „Citizenship education should focus on competencies of citizens to „negotiate” the cultural codes and symbols that inform them about their position in the global networks that mark their lives” • Three main objectives in citizenship education for adults: • Education to facilitate the critical interrogation of dominant cultural codes and symbols in order to help finding connections between power and culture referring to interest and knowledge; • Education can encourage the exploration of cultural perspectives and codes embedded in different meanings, values and views (Finding alternatives, holistic meaning); • Personalizing the political. Deconstructing dominant codes of information by discovering personal experiences of learning citizenship. Active citizenship T. Jansen: Citizenship, Identities and Adult Education. In: Schmidt-Lauff, S. (ed.) (2003) Adult Education and Lifelong Learning. Verlag Kovac, Berlin. Pp. 55-69. B. Németh – Erasmus Exchange – September, 2012

  11. „.. A key purpose of lifelong learning as democratic citizenship, recognizing that democratic citizenship depends on such factors as effective economic development, attention to the demands of the least powerful in our societies, and on the impact of industrial processes on the caring capacity of our common home, the planet. The notion of citizenship is important in terms of connecting individuals and groups to the structures of social, political economic, activity in both local and global contexts.” Active citizenship Mumbai statement on Lifelong Learning, Active Citizenship and the Reform of Higher Education UNESCO, 1998 International Journal of Lifelong Education Vol 17.No. 6. , p. 360. B. Németh – Erasmus Exchange – September, 2012

  12. Active citizenship „We see a key purpose of lifelong learning as democratic citizenship, … Democratic citizenship highlights the importance of women and men as agents of history in all aspects of their lives.” The Cape Town Statement on Characteristic Elements of a Lifelong Learning Higher Education Institution. UNESCO, 2001. B. Németh – Erasmus Exchange – September, 2012

  13. „Encouraging active citizenship means that celebrating learning is connected with active citizenship by individuals, families organizations and communities.” That is why the Commission, under the R3L programme for ‘Promoting active involvement in local governance, raising awareness of individual rights and duties as members of society, encouraging social solidarity and inter-generational learning in the local community, harnessing the experience of senior citizens for lifelong learning, protecting the local environment or cultural heritage as a dimension of lifelong learning.” Active citizenship N. Longworth (2006) Lifelong Learning in Action. Kogan Page. London. Pp. 86-88. B. Németh – Erasmus Exchange – September, 2012

  14. „Active citizenship in the learning city A successfully implemented consultation system should inspire citizens to do more than just deliver an opinion. ..One of the most important indicators of succesful learning cities and regions is the extent to which their citizens participate in active citizenship programmes that enhance community living, learning and social cohesion.” Active citizenship N. Longworth (2006) Learning Cities, Learning Regions, Learning Communities. Kogan Page. London. p. 153. B. Németh – Erasmus Exchange – September, 2012

  15. „However, the key to the door of citizenship in contemporary society, according to EC policy documents, is employability that, paradoxically, can produce life, which might udermine the desire to participate in active citizenship.” „Citizenship is now a responsibility rather than a right and,… there is still a fundamental conceptual difference between citizenship and active citizenship – the one about rights and the other about the excercise of responsibility, although this need not occur only in traditional sphere of national citizenship. Territory and playing a role in the political/public domain are no longer the basis of active citizenship but being members of communities of interest – whether local, regional, national or international.” (p. 12.) Active citizenship P. Jarvis (2004) Lifelong Learning and Active Citizenship in a Global Society. JACE, NIACE-Leicester. Vol 10., No1., Pp. 3-19. B. Németh – Erasmus Exchange – September, 2012

  16. HEIs Region Closed model of HEI/region interface Education Skills R&D Innovation Service to Community Culture Community and Sustainability Active citizenship OECD IMHE-CERI (2007) Higher Education and Regions. Globally Competitive, Locally Engaged. OECD, Paris. p.40. upon Goddard and Chatterton (2003) B. Németh – Erasmus Exchange – September, 2012

  17. Lifelong Learning „Lifelong learning is about interaction between learners, educators, and diverse knowledges. As the construction, understanding and sharing of knowledge is the most fundamental purpose of universities and other HEIs, so a full understanding of lifelong learning calls us to examine many assumptions.” „Lifelong learning supports the decolonization of the mind by encouraging the re-examination of relationships between scientific, often understood as ‘official’ knowledge, and the specific diverse knowledges of local communities, cultures and contexts.” Mumbai statement on Lifelong Learning, Active Citizenship and the Reform of Higher Education UNESCO, 1998 International Journal of Lifelong Education Vol 17.No. 6. , p. 361. B. Németh – Erasmus Exchange – September, 2012

  18. Lifelong Learning „Lifelong learning can be approached by the market and can be seen as a means of control.” ”The value of the phenomenon depends on what aspects of lifelong learning are being analysed and the perspective that is being adopted in the analysis. Three market values of lifelong learning: An economic return on lifelong learning; An educational value given to personal learning through the accreditation of experimental and prior experimental learning; skills, competencies, qualifications become currency in the labour market.” P. Jarvis (2007) Globalisation, Lifelong Learning and the Learning Society. Routledge Falmer, London. Vol. 2. Pp.132.-134. B. Németh – Erasmus Exchange – September, 2012

  19. Lifelong Learning New Educational Order „Five elements of a future strategy: rethinking the role of schooling in a learning society – University LLL (?) widening participation in adult learning – EC communications (?) developing the workplace as a site of learning – HRD (?) building active citizenship by investing in social capital - HEI (?) pursuing the search for meaning - HEI (?) J. Field (2007) Lifelong Learning and the New Educational Order. Trentham Books, Stoke on Trent. p.148. B. Németh – Erasmus Exchange – September, 2012

  20. University Lifelong Learning „The pedagogical relations of academics to their students have been transformed in the client-driven, user-pays university that utilizes new learning technologies. The new instrumentalism and vocationalism, together with the managerialist desire for control and emphasis on image management in market-driven systems of education, means intensified public srutiny. The performative university has responded by intensifying internal pressure for quality assurance and improved outcomes, largly measured through the capacity to attract and retain students, but also through input measures of research monies and output performance indicators of publications and commercial benefits. This new focus on outcomes linked to funding and consumer satisfaction has placed effective teaching and learning at the center of of managing the postmodern university and has increased surveillance over academics.” J. Blackmore (2001) Universities in crisis? Knowledge economies, emancipatory pedagogies, and the critical intellectual. Educational Theory, 51(3), pp. 353-371. B. Németh – Erasmus Exchange – September, 2012

  21. University Lifelong Learning? „University departments of adult, continuing and community education have always stood on the edge of the academy – as marginal, potentially creative, but vulnerable places. Historically, perhaps what distinguished them most clearly has been their role as agents of civic mission of the academy.” „In this sense, they have worked as instruments of the ‘democratic intellect’ and sought to sustain some connection between the idea of the university and the ideal of an ‘educated public’.” „It is very much against the odds, therefore, that we have tried to re-invent elements of the civic mission of the university, understood as a public institutions, in some of our work.” J. Crowther, I. Martin, M. Shaw: Re-inventing the Civic Tradition: In and Against the State of Higher Education. In: R.V. de Castro, A.V. Sancho, P. Guimaraes (eds.) (2006) Adult Education. New Routes in a New Landscape. University of Minho, Braga. Pp. 135-147. B. Németh – Erasmus Exchange – September, 2012

  22. Ministry of Education and Culture, 2005. Overall improvement of the quality of life Improvement of competitiveness Strengthening social, economic and regional cohesion Sustainable growth The strategy for lifelong learning in Hungary Equal opportunities New governance Enhancing the efficiency of the education and training system and increasing related public and private investment Improving the quality of education and training Strengthening the links between the education and training system and the labour market Enhanced support to the learning opportunities of the socially disadvantaged Encouraging the introduction of procedures facilitating the efficiency of education and training (partnership) Career guidance, counselling and monitoring Promoting and ensuring sustainability of innovation Developing of assessment, evaluation and quality management systems Recognition of non-formal and informal learning Strengthening social partnership and intersectoral coordination Improving access to education and training opportunities at a regional level New teaching and learning culture Promoting individual and employer investment in education and training Harmonisation of the development of labour market and education and training systems Making use of opportunities opened by international (European) cooperation Developing basic skills and key competences Expansion of learning opportunities Supporting vulnerable groups in the labour market Improving the infrastructure of education

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