Learning and leadership: Evaluation of an Australian rural leadership program

Authors: Wendy Madsen, Cathy O’Mullan and Helen Keen-Dyer, Central Queensland University

Summary:  Leadership programs have been extensively promoted in rural communities in Australia. However, few have been evaluated. The results of the evaluation of a rural leadership program provided in this paper highlight the need for adult learning theories to be more overtly identified and utilised as the basis of planning and implementing leadership programs. Transformative learning theory and social learning theory were used to explain the impact the program had for participants and to provide insight into how similar programs could be enhanced.

Keywords: rural leadership; adult learning; non-formal learning

 

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This article is part of AJAL, Volume 54_1. The entire volume is available in .pdf for purchase here.

What’s politics got to do with it? ‘Power’ as a ‘threshold’ concept for undergraduate business students

Author: Paul D. Williams, Griffith University

Summary:  Politics courses embedded in business and commerce degree programs have soared in number in recent years. Yet how business students, often compulsorily enrolled in politics courses, learn key politics concepts is an under-researched area. The purpose of this article is to determine where the teaching and learning of political science and business intersects. This research reviews the place of the “threshold concept” in student learning, with particular reference to “power” as a political concept. This article advances three arguments: that the study of political institutions involves a series of “threshold” concepts that students must pass over before moving onto a higher plane of understanding; that the teaching of political institutions should span the three key areas of knowledge, attitudes and skills; and that a real understanding of political institutions allows students to regard business figures, in pursuing self-interest, as “political” actors like any other.  

Keywords: Politics, power, business, threshold concept

 

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This article is part of AJAL, Volume 54_1. The entire volume is available in .pdf for purchase here.

Book review – Popular education, power and democracy: Swedish experiences and contributions

Book Review: Popular education, power and democracy: Swedish experiences and contributions, Ann-Marie Laginder, Henrik Nordvall and Jim Crowther (eds.), NIACE: Leicester 2013, distributed in Australia through Footprint Books

Reviewed by: Michael F. Christie, Southern Cross University

 

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This article is part of AJAL, Volume 53_3. The entire volume is available in .pdf for purchase here.

Adult Education Conferences in 2013

(i) AVETRA Conference – Fremantle, Western Australia: VET research at the edge – training for diversity and change.

(ii) United Association for Labor Education (UALE) Conference – Toronto, Canada: Across boundaries: What are workers saying and doing?

(iii)  Adult Learning Australia (ALA) Conference with ACE Aotearoa – Wellington, NZ: Confident communities – HāporiTū Rangatira

(iv) Canadian Association for the Study of Adult Education (CASAE) – British Columbia, Canada:

(v) International Researching Work and Learning (RWL) Conference – Stirling, Scotland: The visible and invisible in work and learning

(vi) SCUTREA Conference – Glasgow, Scotland: Mobilities and transitions: Learning, institutions, global and social movements

(vii) Comparative education world congress – Buenos Aires, Brazil: New times, new voices

Authors: Various

 

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These articles are part of AJAL, Volume 53_3. The entire volume is available in .pdf for purchase here.

Literacy strategies used by adults with intellectual disability in negotiating their everyday community environments

Authors: Michelle F. Morgan, Karen B. Moni and Monica Cuskelly; University of Queensland

Edition: Volume 53, Number 3, November 2013

Summary:    This paper presents the findings from one part of a participatory research investigation about the literacy strategies used by three young adults with intellectual disability in their everyday community environments. Using data collected through video recording, prompting and think-alouds, information was collected about the range of literacy events that the research partners engaged with and the strategies that they used to negotiate these events. Findings revealed that these young adults engage in literacy in their everyday lives using literacy strategies that are multiple and varied and which draw on learned school-based and context specific strategies. Visual texts enabled more effective construction of meaning. Multiple context specific examples are provided to create a snapshot of how these young adults use literacy in their everyday community environments that broadens our knowledge and understanding of the types of literacy events and strategies that they engage with.

Keywords: literacy, intellectual disability, community, strategies

 

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This article is part of AJAL, Volume 53_3. The entire volume is available in .pdf for purchase here.

Ready for action and civic engagement: Resilient third age women learners in rural Australia

Author: Glenna Lear, University of South Australia

Edition: Volume 53, Number 3, November 2013

Summary: This paper discusses the power of local and experiential knowledge, civic engagement and social transformation on rural third age women’s learning. My passion for learning reflects the methodological stance of heuristic inquiry, which requires the researcher to have a passionate interest in the phenomena under investigation and in this case, includes my tacit knowledge as a third age learner, a former farming partner and a long term resident of the region. Our two informal conversations about their midlife learning gave the six purposively selected women aged 58 – 70 the opportunity to reflect on their learning autobiographies as co-researchers. In their midlife, the women had the freedom and determination to change directions and the generative passions to remain useful, to give something back to their communities and to make them a better place for their retirement years and future generations. They emerged from the relative obscurity of the backrooms, kitchens and traditional supportive roles as farmer’s wives and mothers to become community activists, leaders and change agents who transformed their small service communities into thriving, vibrant, ‘can do’ societies better able to cope with the political, social, economic and environmental changes prevailing in regional Australia since the 1990s. They built new networks within the community and with the wider world and used their local knowledge and personal experiences to develop appropriate strategies for community renewal, which exposed them to diverse experiences, new knowledge and different ways of doing things. Unexpectedly they flourished and experienced personal development, growth and a transformation of the self as a blooming and fruition with the maturation of their potential.

Keywords: third age learning, community engagement, rural women, informal learning, personal transformation

 

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This article is part of AJAL, Volume 53_3. The entire volume is available in .pdf for purchase here.

Experiencing English and cultural learning during study tours

Author: Associate professor Shin Yu Miao, Department of Applied Foreign Languages, Ling Tung University, Taiwan

Edition: Volume 46, Number 3, November 2006

Summary: Significant aspects of my doctorate in adult education, which I studiedover the past few years, were related to the exploration of English and cultural learning through study tours. Now, with the hard task done, and thesis completed, it is motivating to reflect on these aspects and their systematic application.

Keywords: study tour

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Basic concepts of the educational science sub-discipline of adult education

Author: Kaethe Schneider, Frederch-Schiller University, Jena, Thuringia, Germany

Edition: Volume 45, Number 3, November 2005

Summary: In this study, a conceptual system is outlined for the educational science sub-discipline of adult education. Adults’ attending instruction or not attending instruction is conceptually specified. Focusing as it does on a cardinal event of adult education, this represents a first step toward a system for the educational science sub-discipline of adult education. Attending instruction is mainly understood as action, and non-attending instruction as behavior. Instruction is a system of educational actions in which the teacher orients a subject to the educand in order to change his or her psychic dispositions.

Keywords: adult education, action, behavior

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And now it’s time to say goodbye – a decade of learning and development in rural and remote health

Author: Ross Hartley, Adjunct Associate Professor, School of Health, University of New England; Hunter New England Health

Edition: Volume 45, Number 3, November 2005

Summary: The halcyon days of learning and development in New England Area Health Service ended with the 2005 NSW Health restructure. The previous decade had been one of creativity, innovation, risk-taking and major reform. The new order’s focus is workforce capability and learning, touting strategic development rather than learning and development per se. What changes are effected remains to be seen. This paper takes a collage approach to the context and issues that drove innovation and reform in learning in the bush. Apart from providing a single repository for these, the attempt is made to reflect on the worth and value of the journey undertaken. Given the major difference in our approach to learning, compared with that from the other (then) seventeen area health services, the question is asked of our efficacy in transforming the learning culture.

Keywords: NEAHS, L&D, workforce capability, strategic development

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A tale of two towns: learning community initiatives in Bega and Thuringowa

Author: Peter Kearns, Visiting Research Fellow, Adult Learning Australia

Edition: Volume 45, Number 3, November 2005

Summary: Current learning community initiatives in Bega Valley and Thuringowa illustrate trends that are likely to become more significant in communities across Australia. In both cases, local government councils have supported the projects with the council library taking a leading entrepreneurial role in the initiative. This role reflects the growing interest of libraries in lifelong learning, and in their role as community learning centres. These initiatives are discussed against the background of wider issues in the development of learning communities in Australia.

Keywords: local government, library, lifelong learning,

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