Transcript Slide 1

What is lifelong learning?
Campaign for Learning definition
 Learning is a process of active engagement with experience
 It is what people do when they want to make sense of the world
 It may involve an increase in skills, knowledge, understanding,
values or the capacity to reflect
 Effective learning will lead to change, development and a desire
to learn more
Article 24 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
Article 14 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social And
Cultural Rights (ICESCR)
• Education is indispensable for realising other rights
• Education has an intrinsic value for the development of the
individual – for the exercise of capabilities, choices and freedoms
• Education has a care function as well as a development function:
this cannot be guaranteed in a commercialised system
• Education enables one to overcome other social disadvantages
• Education is a Public Good as well as a Personal Good - it enriches
cultural, social, political and economic life locally and globally
• Education credentials play a crucial role in mediating access to
other goods, notably employment, culture etc.
So, why do we need CALL? Why now?
• Rising charges and course cut backs have seen up to two million
learners’ places lost from further and adult education in England
since 2005. Now groups representing students, staff and local
communities have come together to campaign for the right of
everyone to access to learning irrespective of class, gender, age,
ethnicity, sexual orientation, disability, asylum status or employment.
• We have founded CALL, the Campaigning Alliance for Lifelong
Learning because we believe that affordable access to the life
changing opportunities provided by education is the hallmark of a
civilised society.
Markets are driven by to maximise profit
A marketisation model is not an appropriate template for adult
education as:
• some educational activities, such as those encouraging voluntary
public service, participation in civil society, creativity, health and
wellbeing have public value but are not intended to create a financial
profit.
• some people are not major producers in market terms but still have
a right to learning. These include older and isolated people, people
with caring responsibilities and people whose long-term mental and
physical health difficulties or learning disabilities restrict their
employment options.
Social capital is at risk as well as economic capital
Can we afford the consequences if notions of:
• Collectivism, cooperation and service
are overshadowed by
• individualism, competition and target-driven performance?
“What we risk losing, many agree, are those communal spaces
where meaningful social interaction broadens people’s sense of self
beyond the “me” and “I” into the “we” and “us”.”
(Crossman et al 2000)
Marketisation represents authoritarianism - rule by ‘experts’
• Much of part-time adult and community education is not directly for
the market but is to educate citizens as members of civil society, and
rounded individuals (with personal, cultural, social, emotional, health
and care needs)
• Education for the citizen as a tolerant, cultural, responsible, political
and engaged members of society should be valued and not simply
market-led to produce citizens who are producers and consumers.
• In a market-led system based on buying training to produce
measured employment-based outcomes, access to a broad
curriculum of lifelong learning is no longer a matter of choice but of
ability to pay.
The WEA avoids coercion and uses the concepts of:
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Involvement
Democracy and active participation in planning
Critical thinking
Encouragement
Shared learning
Guidance
Community as well as individual benefit
rather than compulsion, prescription, testing and assignment.
The impersonal teacher is saying in effect: ‘‘I am here because I am
paid; you are here because you have to be. We will both be satisfied if
you get passing grades. I can’t be concerned about how you develop
as a person or what you do in life with the information I am
communicating. I teach you what I am told to teach and that is the limit
of my responsibility for you.”
D. J. Reitz: 1998 Moral Crisis in the Schools; What Parents and Teachers Need to Know
Baltimore Cathedral Foundation Press
Education based on a ‘template’ approach is ultimately self-limiting.
How can people and society develop if the adult curriculum is
restricted to skills - without any emphasis on knowledge and
understanding - and access to learning is on the basis of prescription
or access to disposable income?
There ARE economic benefits of adult learning:
• Voluntary activity in the adult and community learning sectors is a
social service that adds value.
• Active and engaged older people make fewer demands on health
services.
• Increased tolerance improves community cohesion, with financial as
well as social benefits.
• Children’s attainment – and future employability – increases if
parents and carers are actively engaged in learning activities.
• Part-time adult learning is the doorway that makes educational
systems easier to enter for the so-called ‘hard to reach’.
• Creativity and increased confidence can lead to employment.
CALL believes our education system should provide:
• equality of access to high quality education for all learners (regardless
of: class, gender, age, ethnicity, sexual orientation, disability, asylum
status or employment status), including a statutory right to learning in
the workplace
• universal access to basic skills, ESOL and ICT courses and a first level
three qualification regardless of age
• learner, teacher and community involvement in all levels of decisionmaking about their learning wherever it takes place
• learning for personal wellbeing and development and the maintenance
of local authority adult education
• a path out of poverty and disadvantage including widening participation
in higher education and the provision of a second chance later in life
• a stable, motivated and rewarded workforce of professional
practitioners.
WHAT YOU CAN DO:
• Join CALL
• Write to your MP about the Early Day Motion
• Join the Parliamentary lobby on 25 February
• Information on all of this is at:
www.callcampaign.co.uk
Early Day Motion: EDM no: 533
That this House welcomes the launch of the Campaigning Alliance for
Lifelong Learning (CALL) in September 2008; shares its concern that over
1.4 million places have been lost in the last two years in English adult
education due to cuts and fee rises; notes that over 150 organisations are
CALL supporters; believes that particularly at this time of recession,
affordable access to the life-changing opportunities provided by education
is the hallmark of a civilised society; considers that adult learning needs to
be simultaneously expanded, resourced and promoted alongside workbased skills training in the Children, Skills and Learning Bill; and calls for
immediate action to ensure a full range of learning opportunities for adults;
to adjust the Personal and Community Development Learning budget to
increase with inflation, and redirect any underspend on the Train to Gain
programme to meet individual learner demand.
Parliamentary Lobby
• On Wednesday 25 February 2009 the CALL Campaign is holding a
mass lobby of Parliament to take our message to MPs across all
parties.
• The lobby will start at 10.30am with briefings and registration for
participants at a venue close to Westminster (to be confirmed soon).
The rally in the House of Commons will start at 12.30pm in
Committee Room 14 and the lobby will finish at 4pm.
• You can register your interest is attending through via on onloine
form on the CALL website at www.callcampaign.org.uk
or by contacting Funso Akande at [email protected], 020
7922 7960.