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Cantor, Jeffery A. – 2000
What has come to be recognized as the classic model of the university is changing as a result of industry's new and emerging needs for knowledge, constant technological innovation, education's place in the economy, and diminishing funding. American industry recognizes that the skills of workers at all levels will need to improve continuously in…
Descriptors: Corporate Education, Higher Education, Partnerships in Education, School Business Relationship
Kerka, Sandra; Imel, Susan – 1993
The fifth National Education Goal--every adult will be literate and possess the necessary skills for competing in a global economy and to exercise the rights and responsibilities of citizenship--is being implemented in part through workplace literacy programs. To reach the goal of universal literacy in the United States, five objectives were…
Descriptors: Adult Basic Education, Adult Literacy, Basic Skills, Corporate Education
Imel, Susan – 1991
The changes in the composition of the labor force and the changing personal needs of older people are creating powerful incentives for them to remain in or reenter the work force. For many, this will mean job training or retraining. Training for older workers is provided through both private companies and publicly funded programs such as the Job…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Aging (Individuals), Corporate Education, Older Adults
Harrison, Cheryl – 1988
The skills of knowing how to learn and apply information, which have been collectively grouped under the heading "learning management," are becoming increasingly important as society progresses farther into the information age. Because adult learning is usually more self-directed and because adults are largely free to determine their…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adult Learning, Corporate Education, Group Instruction
Imel, Susan – 1988
During the first half of the 1980s, the focus of the literacy movement was on strengthening literacy programs through the recruitment of volunteers. Although these early efforts are continuing, the focus in adult literacy has changed. Job-related or workplace literacy has become a national priority, and the impact of adult illiteracy on private…
Descriptors: Adult Basic Education, Adult Education, Adult Literacy, Corporate Education
Nash, Nancy S.; Hawthorne, Elizabeth M. – 1988
Corporate education is an extensive, multifaceted endeavor, costing billions of dollars, educating millions of people, and absorbing many working hours annually. Offerings range from remedial to postgraduate level management and technical courses. Corporate educators are fulfilling educational needs of nontraditional students, often before…
Descriptors: Competition, Corporate Education, Credit Courses, Educational Change
Naylor, Michele – 1988
In the past, employer-provided, job-specific training for new employees and continuing education for those who wished to advance in their jobs were often sufficient to keep abreast of technological changes. This is no longer the case, however. The substantial monetary and time expenditures associated with retraining programs that are begun only…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Corporate Education, Educational Benefits, Educational Needs
Budke, Wesley E.; Kerka, Sandra – 1988
Training and development professionals play a unique role in helping people improve their performance by using all aspects of the work environment to make those improvements occur. These professions are currently debating the existence of an integrated theoretical framework and how it might support practice in their field. Human performance…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adult Educators, Corporate Education, Human Factors Engineering
Lankard, Bettina A. – 1991
Economic, social, and technological changes highlight the value of human resources and employee training. Acquiring the knowledge and skills demanded of today's workers represents a lifelong learning experience that must be nurtured through work-related learning activities and workplace training. For the employer, training supports organizational…
Descriptors: Continuing Education, Corporate Education, Education Work Relationship, Industrial Training
Kerka, Sandra – 1997
Constructivism suggests a way to restructure the learning environment to make the transfer of learning from school to work settings more effective. The theory rests on the notion that learners actively construct knowledge by integrating new information and experiences into what they have previously come to understand. Using a constructivist…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Structures, Concept Formation, Constructivism (Learning)