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Adult and Non-formal Education in the Third World
Hopeton L. A. Gordon
International Council for Adult Education
University of British Columbia. Centre for Continuing Education
其他書名
A Jamaican Perspective
出版
Centre for Continuing Education, University of British Columbia
, 1985
主題
Education / General
Education / Adult & Continuing Education
Education / Non-Formal Education
ISBN
0888431333
9780888431332
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=PszsYibb0QcC&hl=&source=gbs_api
註釋
There are more than 70 different organizations in Jamaica engaged in some form of adult education, from university extension and professional career and skills training to social education and basic literacy. Programming for adults is currently available in the following forms: training for out-of-school youth, basic adult education and literacy training, the arts and culture, instruction delivered via the mass media, church-provided instruction, management and administrative training, and continuing education for professional personnel. As in other developing nations, adult education in Jamaica is viewed primarily as a tool for development that constitutes the main agency for social change. Compared with many other Third World countries, Jamaica lags behind in adult education at the university level. Extensive coordination efforts are necessary to remedy the currently fragmented nature of adult education services. Improvements are especially needed in the areas of lifelong learning, teacher education for adult educators, development of a mass education movement, and adequate training in the area of management development. Perhaps the most important task facing adult education in Jamaica is to convince Jamaicans that matters of science and technology are not beyond the grasp of Third World nations and that Jamaica's subsistence-level working population can indeed become a part of a modern industrializing state. (MN)