Synopses & Reviews
Global Issues and Adult Education shows how adult education can be used to support the positive outcomes of globalization that lead to greater good and to thwart the outcomes that produce negative consequences. The contributors discuss the importance of grassroots activism and adult education in changing the status of marginalized groups. They also reveal how adult education can address critical health crises such as the lack of a clean, safe, and natural environment and the HIV/AIDS pandemic in Africa. In addition, the book is filled with compelling examples from southern Africa, Latin America, and the United States that clearly demonstrate the use of popular education for community empowerment. The concluding chapters stress the importance of lifelong learning in terms of policy development, access, technology, and distance, experiential, and workplace learning.
This vital collection of work on issues confronting our world will be a critical guide for educators of adults regardless of their field or focus.
Synopsis
Global Issues and Adult Educationbrings together seven years of cutting-edge research and analysis from the Cyril O. Houle Scholars in Adult and Continuing Education. These emerging leaders in the field investigate the importance of adult education in responding to the challenges of global issues. The book is divided into five sections, each of which examines one overarching topic—globalization and the market economy, marginalized populations, environment and health, community empowerment, and lifelong learning and educational systems. Each section begins with an introduction that provides a framework for understanding the overarching issues and summarizes the chapters in the section.
Synopsis
Contributors to Global Issues and Adult Education:Mary V. Alfred
Gillian Attwood
Lisa M. Baumgartner
Alisa Belzer
Laura L. Bierema
Rita María Ceballos
Irene Ellen Chadibe
M. Carolyn Clark
Javier Corvalán
Barbara J. Daley
Doria Daniels
Andrea D. Ellinger
Cecilia Amaluisa Fiallos
Daniel V. Folkman
Mónica Arboleda Giraldo
Juan José Madrigal Goerne
Julián Alberto González
Zelda Groener
Talmadge C. Guy
Catherine A. Hansman
Robert J. Hill
John D. Holst
Juanita Johnson-Bailey
Rita Kizito
María del Carmen Lorenzatti
Peter G. Malvicini
Tonic Maruatona
Barbara McDonald
Mantina V. Mohasi
Vivian W. Mott
Peggy Gabo Ntseane
Vera Masagão Ribeiro
Tonette S. Rocco
Marsha Rossiter
Mercedes Ruiz
Fred M. Schied
Vanessa Sheared
Edward W. Taylor
About the Author
Bradley C. Courtenay is professor of adult education at the University of Georgia. He is coeditor of the journal
Adult Education Quarterly, and results of his research have been published in
Adult Education Quarterly,
International Journal of Lifelong Education, and
Journal of Adult Development.
Ronald M. Cervero is professor and head of the department of Lifelong Education, Administration, and Policy at the University of Georgia. He is the coauthor of Working the Planning Table, Planning Responsibly for Adult Education, and Power in Practice, all from Jossey-Bass.
Table of Contents
Foreword (Gail McClure).
Preface.
The Editors.
The Contributors.
PART ONE: GLOBALIZATION AND THE MARKET ECONOMY.
1. Adult Education and Social Transformation (Zelda Groener).
2. Adult Education and the Empowerment of the Individual in a Global Society (Cecilia Amaluisa Fiallos).
3. Development of Educators in Relation to Globalization in Latin America (Juan José Madrigal Goerne).
4. Globalization and the Future of Critical Adult Education (John D. Holst).
5. In the Belly of the Beast: Globalization and Adult Education in the United States (Fred M. Schied).
6. Adult Education and the Mass Media in the Age of Globalization (Talmadge C. Guy).
7. Framing a Critical Discourse on Globalization (Daniel V. Folkman).
PART TWO: MARGINALIZED POPULATIONS.
8. Is Adult Education an Agent for Change or Instrument of the Status Quo? (Vivian W. Mott).
9. Race, Politics, and Economic Self-Sufficiency in a Culture of Welfare Reform (Mary V. Alfred).
10. Women Facing Internal Armed Conflict: The Challenge for Adult Education (Mónica Arboleda Giraldo).
11. Using Visual Methods to Bring People to the Center (Doria Daniels).
12.Women’s Learning and Development in the Workplace (Laura L. Bierema).
13. Mainstreaming Marginalized Populations Through Adult Education Programs: The Herdboys in Lesotho (Mantina V. Mohasi).
14. Disability as an Issue of Marginalization (Tonette S. Rocco).
15. The Intersection of Education, Hegemony, and Marginalization Within the Academy (Vanessa Sheared).
16. Breaking Down Barriers: Challenging the Hegemony of Privileged Positionalities (Lisa M. Baumgartner).
PART THREE: ENVIRONMENT AND HEALTH.
17. The Role of the Church in Combating HIV/AIDS (Irene Ellen Chadibe).
18.Western and Indigenous African Knowledge Systems Affecting Gender and HIV/AIDS Prevention in Botswana (Peggy Gabo Ntseane).
19. Aligning Health Promotion and Adult Education for Healthier Communities (Barbara J. Daley).
20. “He Hits Me and My World Shatters. . . .”: How Could Adult Education Possibly Make a Difference Here? (M. Carolyn Clark).
21. The Greening of the Adult Education Academy (Edward W. Taylor).
22. Environmental Adult Education: Producing Polychromatic Spaces for a Sustainable World (Robert J. Hill).
23. Adult Education on the Environmental Margin: A Call for Action (Barbara McDonald).
PART FOUR: COMMUNITY EMPOWERMENT.
24. Adult Education and Social Capital: Supporting Communities in the Context of HIV/AIDS (Gillian Attwood).
25. Transformative Learning: A Community Empowerment Conduit for African American Women (Juanita Johnson-Bailey).
26. Adult Education for Community Empowerment: Toward the Possibility of Another World (Rita María Ceballos).
27. Noninstrumental Objectives for Contemporary Popular Education (Julián Alberto González).
28. Adult Literacy Education and Empowerment in Africa: Problems and Prospects (Tonic Maruatona).
29. Literacy as a Human Right: Research and Policies (Vera Masagão Ribeiro).
30. Improving the Effectiveness of Volunteers in Community-Based Adult Literacy Education (Alisa Belzer).
PART FIVE: LIFELONG LEARNING AND EDUCATIONAL SYSTEMS.
31. Radical Mutuality and Self-Other Relationship in Adult Education (Marsha Rossiter).
32. Low-Income Adult Learners in Higher Education: Politics, Policies, and Praxis (Catherine A. Hansman).
33. Research in Popular and Adult Education in Latin America (Mercedes Ruiz).
34.Ways of Organizing Knowledge for Teaching in Youth and Adult Education (María del Carmen Lorenzatti).
35. Building a Learning Community for Parents and Directors of Educational Establishments in Chile (Javier Corvalán).
36. Popular Education and Lifelong Learning: An Integrative Approach to Poverty, Development, and Change (Peter G. Malvicini).
37. Challenges in Setting up Systems for Assessing Prior Experiential Learning in Higher Distance Education (Rita Kizito).
38. The Role of “Learning-Committed Leaders” in Lifelong Learning (Andrea D. Ellinger).
PART SIX: CONCLUSION.
39. The Role of Adult Education in Addressing Global Issues (Sharan B. Merriam, Bradley C. Courtenay, Ronald M. Cervero).
Name Index.
Subject Index.