Lifelong learning

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

Lifelong learning, also known as LLL, is the "lifelong, lifewide, voluntary, and self-motivated"[1] pursuit of knowledge for either personal or professional reasons. As such, it not only enhances social inclusion, active citizenship and personal development, but also competitiveness and employability.[2]

The term recognises that learning is not confined to childhood or the classroom, but takes place throughout life and in a range of situations. During the last fifty years, constant scientific and technological innovation and change has had a profound effect on learning needs and styles. Learning can no longer be divided into a place and time to acquire knowledge (school) and a place and time to apply the knowledge acquired (the workplace).[3]

Contents

[edit] Learning economy

Lifelong learning may be most usefully thought of as a policy response by largely western governments to a changing world. These underlying changes are a move away from manufacturing to a services economy, the emergence of the knowledge economy and the decline of many traditional institutions which has been requiring individuals to become more active in managing their lives.[4]

This has led to the realization that formal learning, typically concentrated in the earlier stages of life, can no longer sustain an individual throughout their life.

In a book by Christopher Day, published in 1998, Developing Teachers: The Challenge of Lifelong Learning, there was recognition towards the role of teachers in inculcating lifelong learning in the formal teachings of his/her students while at the same time realising the need for teachers to practice lifelong learning, in order to develop themselves as well. Through this realisation, that throughout a teachers/educators professional being, lifelong learning is a must[1].

In October 2006 the European Commission published a Communication entitled "Adult learning: It is never too late to learn."[2] This document suggests lifelong learning to be the core of the ambitious Lisbon 2010-process, in which the whole of the European Union should become a learning area. In December 2007, the European Parliament's Committe on Culture and Education published a "Report on Adult learning: It is never too late to learn", which recognized the Commission Communication and a number of related recommendations and resolutions, and which urged member states to establish a lifelong learning culture.[5][6]

In 2008, the OECD published an article entitled "Recognition of non-formal and informal learning in OECD countries: A very good idea in jeopardy?" which advocates a pragmatic approach to formal recognition of informal and non-formal learning. The author bases the distinctions between 'formal', 'informal' and 'non-formal' learning on three criteria. [7][8] The article points out that 'qualification' and 'certification' are "not very useful" in making the distinction between formal and informal and non-formal learning, and should be dropped. A common understanding of the meaning of the terms, or at least a framework for definition has important implications for workers in a global labour market and participants in formal and informal/non-formal learning environments.

Now, these days the buzz word is on metacognition - thinking about thinking, a higher order of thinking, that students and learners try to achieve to be better people. In this day and age, the ability to think what beyond what others do, thinking outside the storage room where the box is placed is a must have quality where with the ability to access the internet for the plethora of information that is not only written, complements the learning experience and enables anyone and everyone to practice lifelong learning - formally and informally.

[edit] Lifelong learning contexts

Although the term is widely used in a variety of contexts its meaning is often unclear.[9]

There are several established contexts for lifelong learning beyond traditional "brick and mortar" schooling:

  • Home schooling where this involves learning to learn or the development of informal learning patterns.
  • Adult education or the acquisition of formal qualifications or work and leisure skills later in life.
  • Continuing education which often describes extension or not-for-credit courses offered by higher education institutions.
  • Knowledge work which includes professional development and on-the-job training.
  • Personal learning environments or self-directed learning using a range of sources and tools including online applications.

[edit] Metacognition

Literally ‘thinking about the process of knowing,’ metacognition refers to “higher order thinking which involves active control over the cognitive processes engaged in learning.”[10]

Metacognition involves:

  • Knowledge: awareness of your own thought processes and learning styles, and knowledge of the strategies that might be used for different learning tasks.
  • Control or self-regulation: keeping track of your thinking processes, regulating and evaluating them.[11]

While the study of metacognition originally gave educational psychologists insights into what differentiated successful students from their less successful peers, it is increasingly being used to inform teaching that aims to make students more aware of their learning processes, and show them how to regulate those processes for more effective learning throughout their lives.[12]

As lifelong learning is "lifelong, lifewide, voluntary, and self-motivated"[1] learning to learn, that is, learning how to recognize learning strategies, and monitor and evaluate learning, is a pre-condition for lifelong learning. Metacognition is an essential first step in developing lifelong learning.

[edit] In practice

In India and elsewhere, the "University of the Third Age" (U3A) provides an example of the almost spontaneous emergence of autonomous learning groups accessing the expertise of their own members in the pursuit of knowledge and shared experience. No prior qualifications and no subsequent certificates feature in this approach to learning for its own sake and, as participants testify, engagement in this type of learning in later life can indeed 'prolong active life'.

In Sweden the successful concept of study circles, an idea launched almost a century ago, still represents a large portion of the adult education provision. The concept has since spread, and for instance, is a common practice in Finland as well. A study circle is one of the most democratic forms of a learning environment that has been created. There are no teachers and the group decides on what content will be covered, scope will be used, as well as a delivery method.

Sometimes lifelong learning aims to provide educational opportunities outside standard educational systems — which can be cost-prohibitive, if it is available at all. On the other hand, formal administrative units devoted to this discipline exist in a number of universities. For example, the 'Academy of Lifelong Learning' is an administrative unit within the University-wide 'Professional and Continuing Studies' unit at the University of Delaware.[13] Another example is the Jagiellonian University Extension (Wszechnica Uniwersytetu Jagiellonskiego), which is one of the most comprehensive Polish centers for lifelong learning (open learning, organizational learning, community learning).[14]

In recent years 'Lifelong Learning' has been adopted in the UK as an umbrella term for post-compulsory education that falls outside of the UK Higher Education system - Further Education, Community Education, Work-based Learning and similar voluntary, public sector and commercial settings.

[edit] Lifelong learning professionals

As the Jagiellonian University Extension defines it, there are seven main professional profiles in the Lifelong Learning domain:

  • trainer
  • coach
  • competency assessor
  • consultant
  • training project manager
  • curriculum designer
  • mentor

[edit] See also

[edit] Further reading

  • Lifelong Learning and the New Educational Order by John Field (Trentham Books, 2006) ISBN 1-85856-346-1
  • The Rapture of Maturity: A Legacy of Lifelong Learning by Charles D. Hayes ISBN 09621979-4-7
  • SELF-UNIVERSITY: The Price of Tuition is the Desire to Learn. Your Degree is a Better life by Charles D. Hayes ISBN 0-9621979-0-4
  • Beyond the American Dream: Lifelong Learning and the Search for Meaning in a Postmodern World by Charles D. Hayes ISBN 0-9621979-2-0
  • Pastore G., Un’altra chance. Il futuro progettato tra formazione e flessibilità, in Mario Aldo Toscano, Homo instabilis. Sociologia della precarietà, Grandevetro/Jaca Book, Milano 2007 ISBN 978-88-16-40804-3

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b [Department of Education and Science (2000). Learning for Life: White Paper on Adult Education. Dublin: Stationery Office. http://eric.ed.gov/ERICDocs/data/ericdocs2sql/content_storage_01/0000019b/80/1a/c6/5e.pdf]
  2. ^ a b Commission of the European Communities: "Adult learning: It is never too late to learn". COM(2006) 614 final. Brussels, 23.10.2006.
  3. ^ Fischer, Gerhard (2000). "Lifelong Learning - More than Training" in Journal of Interactive Learning Research, Volume 11 issue 3/4 pp 265-294.
  4. ^ Field, John (2006). Lifelong Learning and the New Educational Order. Trentham Books, 2006. ISBN 1-85856-346-1
  5. ^ European Parliament: Committee on Culture and Education: Report on Adult learning: It is never too late to learn (2007/2114(INI)). December 11, 2007.
  6. ^ For an interim report, see European Commission: Education and Culture: ‘Education & Training 2010’: Main policy initiatives and outputs in education and training since the year 2000. February 2008.
  7. ^ "whether the learning involves objectives, whether it is intentional and whether it leads to a qualification (the terms ‘qualification’ and ‘certification’ are taken as synonymous here, and they both refer to the process and the final outcome)"
  8. ^ ["Recognition of non-formal and informal learning in OECD countries: A very good idea in jeopardy?" http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/16/41851819.pdf]
  9. ^ Aspin, David N. & Chapman, Judith D. (2007) "Lifelong Learning Concepts and Conceptions" in: David N. Aspin, ed.: Philosophical Perspectives on Lifelong Learning, Springer. ISBN 1402061927
  10. ^ Livingston, Jennifer A. (1997). "Metacognition: An Overview"
  11. ^ Pintrich, Paul R (2002) The role of metacognitive knowledge in learning, teaching, and assessing Theory Into Practice, Autumn http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0NQM/is_4_41/ai_94872708
  12. ^ Livingston, Jennifer A. (1997) Metacognition: An Overview http://www.gse.buffalo.edu/fas/shuell/CEP564/Metacog.htm
  13. ^ "Academy of Lifelong Learning". University of Delaware. 2006. http://www.academy.udel.edu/. Retrieved on 2006-05-06. 
  14. ^ "Wszechnica Uniwersytetu Jagiellonskiego". The Jagiellonian University. 2007. http://www.wszechnica.uj.edu.pl/. Retrieved on 2007-05-15. 
Personal tools