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Wever Frerichs, Saundra; Pearman Fenton, Melissa Sue; Wingert, Kerri – Adult Learning, 2018
Quality out-of-school time (OST) programs for youth are limited by a lack of professional learning opportunities for staff and volunteers that are based upon solid learning theory, affordable, and scalable for a diverse field. The Click2Science project is an innovative model for professional learning experiences that support staff and volunteers…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, Professional Education, Models, Out of School Youth
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Klinge, Carolyn M. – Adult Learning, 2015
The purpose of this article is to provide a conceptual framework for mentoring as an added component of a learning organization in the context of adult learning and development theories. Mentoring is traditionally a process in which an experienced person (the mentor) guides another person (the mentee or protégé) in the development of her or his…
Descriptors: Mentors, Models, Adult Learning, Adult Development
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Alexander, Constance; Goldberg, Marshall – Adult Learning, 2011
Throughout the 1970's and 80's, rapidly advancing technologies, mergers and acquisitions, industry deregulation, emergence of new capital markets, and the shift to an increasingly competitive, global marketplace sparked new training needs for workers. In aerospace, auto, health care, steel, telecommunications and transportation industries, unions…
Descriptors: Labor Education, Lifelong Learning, Labor Force Development, Models
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Taylor, Jonathan E. – Adult Learning, 2010
The political context of curriculum and program development was acknowledged at least as early as 1949 by R.W. Taylor, who, in his seminal work on curriculum, briefly acknowledged the political nature of curriculum design. Contemporary scholars have been much more direct in acknowledging power differentials and politics in the planning process.…
Descriptors: Program Development, Course Content, Curriculum Development, Power Structure
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Sonstrom, Wendy Jean – Adult Learning, 2009
In this reflection, the author proposes that doctoral education is currently undergoing paradigm devolution. Her perspective is that of a doctoral student, specifically a full-time graduate student working towards a Ph.D. in adult education. This fall semester marks her last of coursework, and she finds herself searching to make meaning of the…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Models, Doctoral Programs, Higher Education
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Zafft, Cynthia K. – Adult Learning, 2008
America is becoming a less educated nation (National Commission on Adult Literacy, 2008). While this is frequently measured through comparisons of the number of adults with college degrees, strategies to address sagging educational attainment statistics in the United States are typically focused on K-12 reforms--mostly through expanded definitions…
Descriptors: Nontraditional Students, Elementary Secondary Education, Models, Educational Attainment
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Colgan, Anne H. – Adult Learning, 1993
Offers a brief description of 10 program development models for continuing education. They include models for design, planning, positioning, entrepreneurship, cognition, learning, politics, culture, environment, and configuration. (JOW)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Continuing Education, Models, Program Administration
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Mansoor, Inaam – Adult Learning, 1994
Good workplace education partnerships begin with honest assessment of the problems to be addressed, building of a vision or common mission, commitment to shared responsibility, identification of resources, and the decision to act in concert toward achieving common goals. Models include basic two-partner collaborations and multiple-industry or…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Models, Needs Assessment, Partnerships in Education
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O'Neil, Judy; And Others – Adult Learning, 1995
In looking for a training program development model, a "best practices" model was developed that combined the strengths from five existing models and addressed the challenges of the 1990s. The "best practices" model has eight discrete steps and two continuous processes: needs analysis and an evaluation-and-feedback loop. (JOW)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Models, Program Development, Training
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Caffarella, Rosemary S. – Adult Learning, 1999
This 12-step interactive model for adult-education program planning is based on four assumptions: (1) educational programs should focus on what participants actually learn; (2) program development is negotiated among numerous stakeholders; (3) parts of the model should be used only when applicable; and (4) planners should be ethical. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Educational Planning, Interaction, Models
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Comings, John; Stein, Sondra – Adult Learning, 1991
By following an accreditation model used in a college or university, funding agencies can be sure that adult basic education programs are following good practices rather than structuring their services to satisfy student assessment and outcome goals. (Author/JOW)
Descriptors: Accountability, Accreditation (Institutions), Adult Basic Education, Higher Education
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Giordano, Gerard; D'Alonzo, Bruno J. – Adult Learning, 1993
Reviews six models of prereading programs for developmentally delayed adults: readinglike behavior, picture reading, global features of books, print in the environment, labeling, and rebus symbols. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Basic Education, Adult Reading Programs, Literacy Education, Models