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Tuckett, Alan – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 2017
This article analyses policy and practice in social and cultural education for adults in England in the post Second World War era, beginning with the flowering of municipal adult education and the expansion of university extra-mural provision. It tracks the emerging policy focus on extending participation to under-represented groups, and on…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Lifelong Learning, Adult Education, Educational History
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Tuckett, Alan – International Review of Education, 2013
This paper begins by reviewing the progress which has been made over the past decade in the aim to reach targets such as Education for All and other Millennium Development Goals, especially as far as adult education and gender equality are concerned. While there have been achievements in some countries, universal primary education is not even…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Adult Education, Sex Fairness, Equal Education
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Tuckett, Alan – New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2013
At the time of the fifth UNESCO international conference on adult education (CONFINTEA V) in Hamburg in 1997, it seemed that a resilient alliance of governments and civil society organizations had been created. This alliance would have the commitment and cooperation needed to pursue the ambitious aspirations captured in the 10 themes of the…
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Lifelong Learning, Correctional Institutions, International Cooperation
Tuckett, Alan; Aldridge, Fiona – Adults Learning, 2011
The key message of NIACE's 2011 survey of adult participation in learning is that recession is bad for lifelong learning for anyone over the age of 25. The survey highlights the central importance of workplaces as sites of adult learning--and the challenges posed to a learning society when opportunities to learn reduce. It shows that the gap…
Descriptors: Social Class, Adult Education, Lifelong Learning, Adult Learning
Aldridge, Fiona; Tuckett, Alan – Adults Learning, 2010
NIACE's 2010 representative sample survey of adult participation in learning in the UK shows something of a sea change in adults' engagement in learning. After years in which the numbers reporting participation in learning fell overall, and the gulf between the learning rich and the learning poor widened dramatically, there has been a major…
Descriptors: Adult Students, Student Attitudes, Foreign Countries, Adult Learning
Tuckett, Alan – Adults Learning, 2011
Adult learning is not a tidy business: adults fit learning into the spaces left by the other demands on complex lives, and into the spaces left in administrative structures overwhelmingly designed for other people. No simple metric can capture adults' diverse purposes and achievements, and no single programme can capture the full range of things…
Descriptors: Lifelong Learning, Adult Learning, Adult Education, Adult Students
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Quintero, Lucia; Tuckett, Alan – Convergence, 2007
In anticipation of CONFINTEA VI, this article critically reflects on the last decade of English adult education policy. The United Kingdom played an important role in 1997's Hamburg conference by putting forward International Adult Learners' Week, and inspiring delegates by its enthusiasm for adult education. However the trajectory of the past ten…
Descriptors: Adult Basic Education, Adult Education, Lifelong Learning, Adult Learning
Tuckett, Alan; Aldridge, Fiona – Adults Learning, 2007
This article presents 2007 report on the National Institute of Adult Continuing Education (NIACE) survey on adult participation in learning. With overall participation among the poorest groups stuck at less than half that experienced by the upper and middle classes, the survey suggests the need to ask if the balance of public investment in adult…
Descriptors: Middle Class, Lifelong Learning, Adult Learning, Adult Students
Cara, Sue; Sargant, Naomi; Tuckett, Alan – Adults Learning (England), 1999
Reports on two British surveys: (1) one of 5,054 adults found that more than 1 in 5 currently participate in education, and 87% of those who do not are unlikely to; and (2) one of 3,967 adults found that nearly 6 in 10 speak no second languages, but 49% of those whose first language is not English speak at least two other languages. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Continuing Education, Foreign Countries, Lifelong Learning
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Tuckett, Alan – Lifelong Learning in Europe, 2000
Reviews the British government's educational initiatives described in the Kennedy, Fryer, and Dearing reports and "The Learning Age." Identifies what progress has been made in implementing lifelong learning policy. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Educational Change, Educational Policy, Foreign Countries
Tuckett, Alan; Sargant, Naomi – Adults Learning (England), 1996
A survey of 5,184 adults in the United Kingdom delineated differences in participation in learning and intent to continue education by region, age, and social class. Choice of subjects and information sources were also identified. Results suggest two nations: one convinced of the value of learning and others choosing not to join the learning…
Descriptors: Continuing Education, Educational Trends, Foreign Countries, Lifelong Learning
Tuckett, Alan – 1997
This document is an overview of the projects conducted in England and Wales as part of the European Year of Lifelong Learning. The document begins with an overview of lifelong learning that outlines the United Kingdom's educational attainment targets for the year 2000 and the six strands of the United Kingdom's lifelong learning policy framework…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adult Learning, Comparative Analysis, Education Work Relationship
Aldridge, Fiona; Tuckett, Alan – 2001
Adult participation in the United Kingdom in 2001 was examined through interviews with a weighted sample of 6,310 adults over age 17 across Great Britain with a boosted sample in Wales. The following were among the key findings: (1) for the first time in 20 years, there was a marked upswing in adults' participation in learning from the previous…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adult Learning, Age Differences, Comparative Analysis