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Blunt, Adrian; Richards, Guy – Adult Basic Education, 1998
The Life Role Inventory was completed by 136 marginalized adult basic education students. Ethnicity influenced work values and adult life-roles. Females attached greater importance to roles and values. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Basic Education, Adult Students, Disadvantaged, Ethnicity
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Fenwick, Tara J.; Parsons, Jim – Adult Learning, 1998
Suggests that educational evaluation is complex and that assessing practice, philosophy of teaching and learning, and congruence between belief and action can help to improve the evaluation of adult learners. (JOW)
Descriptors: Adult Students, Evaluation Methods, Higher Education, Performance Based Assessment
Challis, Maggie – Adults Learning (England), 1998
Approaches to learner accreditation form a continuum ranging from institutions determining outcomes and content to empowerment of learners to use their own learning from experience in a way that meets their definition of what is credit worthy. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Students, Credits, Experiential Learning, Higher Education
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Malthus, Caroline; Gunn-Lewis, Jane – New Zealand Journal of Adult Learning, 2000
Focus groups with 30 adult international students studying in New Zealand identified teaching practices they found helpful and ways their perspectives changed over a year. In the acculturation period, students needed detailed assistance. A supportive learning environment that welcomed difference was a key factor. (SK)
Descriptors: Acculturation, Adult Students, Educational Environment, Foreign Students
Crozier, W. Ray; Garbert-Jones, Alison – Adults Learning (England), 1996
Adults returning to school may experience shyness when speaking to teachers and in seminars. Causes include lack of confidence, feeling inadequate or out of place, and imagining themselves inferior to younger students. Increasing familiarity with college and opportunities to practice academic skills in supportive conditions may help. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Students, Anxiety, Higher Education, Participation
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Joseph, Gillian – Canadian Journal of University Continuing Education, 1996
Shopping malls are environments in which many adults find community. They are potentially ideal for adult learning, especially via the Internet, because they can offer pacing, flexible hours, and self-direction and interaction. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Students, Community Education, Educational Environment, Educational Facilities
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Towell, Elizabeth; Neeley, Lynn – New Horizons in Adult Education, 2000
To overcome resistance to distance education as a disruptive technology, deliver it where learners need it, place projects in institutional subunits, plan to fail early and inexpensively in searching for a market, and value the attributes of the disruptive project. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Students, Distance Education, Higher Education, Innovation
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Ross-Gordon, Jovita; Brown-Haywood, Felicia – Journal of Continuing Higher Education, 2000
Interviews with 19 African-American college students age 24 and older indicated that they reentered college with a clearer sense of their goals. To them, meaningful learning had real-world relevance. Self-efficacy was a key to their success and faculty and personal support made a difference. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Students, Black Students, Higher Education, Reentry Students
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Kambutu, John – Journal of Adult Education, 2000
A survey of 67 land-grant institutions found that administrators had varying definitions of distance education, they offered a variety of support services to learners and faculty, distance education is now an important part of their mission, and management of distance learning is the responsibility of individual departments. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Students, Distance Education, Higher Education, Institutional Mission
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Moreland, Neil; Carnwell, Ros – Research in Post-Compulsory Education, 2000
Distance learners need practical, emotional, and academic support. The Learning Support Needs Questionnaire is constructed on the following assumptions: (1) it must relate to students' life history; (2) it must help develop critical self-analysis; (3) it should co-opt students into participating; (4) it should facilitate development of an action…
Descriptors: Adult Students, Distance Education, Educational Counseling, Guidance Programs
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Larson, Desi; Brady, E. Michael – Adult Learning, 2001
Learning autobiographies enable adult learners to gain a deeper insight into theories of adult learning. Writing their learning autobiographies helps adults chart how they have grown and developed. (Contains 11 references.) (Author/JOW)
Descriptors: Adult Development, Adult Education, Adult Students, Autobiographies
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Wickett, R. E. Y. – New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2000
The term learning covenant adds a spiritual dimension to the notion of learning contracts. The learner develops and enters into a written contractual agreement with a facilitator, who creates a space that fosters learning and spiritual growth. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adult Learning, Adult Students, Performance Contracts
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Doran, Cheryl L. – New Horizons in Adult Education, 2001
Teachers, instructional designers, and corporate trainers pursuing graduate degrees in education participated in small-group collaborative activity in an asynchronous online graduate course. A group charter, which provided structure for group evolution and collaboration, was a powerful element in success. Proactive and reactive means of nurturing…
Descriptors: Adult Students, Group Dynamics, Higher Education, Online Courses
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Landorf, Hilary – New Horizons in Adult Education & Human Resource Development, 2006
The Visual Thinking Strategies (VTS) curriculum and teaching method uses art to help students think critically, listen attentively, communicate, and collaborate. VTS has been proven to enhance reading, writing, comprehension, and creative and analytical skills among students of all ages. The origins and procedures of the VTS curriculum are…
Descriptors: Adult Students, Teaching Methods, Curriculum, Thinking Skills
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Davis, Dave – Journal of Continuing Education in the Health Professions, 2006
This article discusses continuing education and the implementation of clinical practice guidelines or best evidence, quality improvement, and patient safety. Continuing education focuses on the perspective of the adult learner and is guided by well-established educational principles. In contrast, guideline implementation and related concepts…
Descriptors: Safety, Guidelines, Educational Principles, Translation
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