Categories: All - development

by Katrin Mikk 7 years ago

519

Andragogy

Lifewide learning encompasses various real-life contexts to foster personal development beyond traditional classroom settings. It acknowledges that individuals engage in multiple roles and spaces, such as work, education, family, and personal well-being, all of which contribute to who they are and who they become.

Andragogy

Andragogy

Ubiquitous learning

Ubiquitous learning is often simply defined as learning anywhere, anytime and is therefore closely associated with mobile technologies. The portability of computers and computing devices has blurred the traditional lines between formal and informal learning. This also considered to be learning that is situated and immersive, and this could take place from the traditional classroom in a virtual environment
https://education-2025.wikispaces.com/Ubiquitous+Learning

Lifelong education

Life-deep learning

is an approach and an attitude to learning, where the learner uses higher-order cognitive skills such as the ability to analyse, synthesize, solve problems, and thinks meta-cognitively in order to construct long-term understanding. It involves the critical analysis of new ideas, linking them to already known concepts, and principles so that this understanding can be used for problem solving in new, unfamiliar contexts. Deep learning entails a sustained, substantial, and positive influence on the way students act, think, or feel.
http://www.julianhermida.com/algoma/law1scotldeeplearning.htm

Lifewide learning

Lifewide learning (LWL) is a teaching strategy and an approach to learning and personal development that involves real contexts and authentic settings. The goal is to address different kinds of learning not covered in a traditional classroom. Lifewide learning adds important detail to the broad pattern of human development we call lifelong learning life. Lifewide learning recognizes that most people, no matter what their age or circumstances, simultaneously inhabit a number of different spaces – like work or education, being a member of a family, being involved in clubs or societies, traveling, taking holidays, and looking after their own well-being mentally, physically, and spiritually. So the timeframes of lifelong learning and the spaces of life-wide learning will characteristically intermingle, and who we are and who we are becoming are the consequences of this intermingling.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lifewide_learning

Lifelong learning

The concept of lifelong learning is extremely confusing since it combines individual learning and institutionalized learning. Learning can be under FROM ADULT EDUCATION TO LIFELONG LEARNING 64 stood as an individual process which continues throughout the whole of life – lifelong learning. But learning can also be considered as institutionalized and formalized: in other words the educational system. It has been widely acknowledged that many learning opportunities have to be provided by the non-educational sectors of society, such as the corporations, and that there need to be partnerships between education and those other providers of learning opportunities. Consequently, lifelong learning embraces the socially institutionalized learning that occurs in the educational system, that which occurs beyond it, and that individual learning throughout the lifespan, which is publicly recognized and accredited
Jarvis, 1996

Continuing education

Continuing education based on societal understandings of a profession and on the importance of developing a professional identity through preparation and continuing involvement in professionally oriented knowledge, values and practices.
Gross-Gordon, J.M., Rose, A.D., Kasworm, C.E. (2016). Foundations of Adult and Continuing Education

Recurrent education

recurrent education is ‘the distribution of education over the lifespan of the individual in a recurring way’
Jarvis, P. (2004). Adult Education and Lifelong Learning

Permanent schooling

all learning activity undertaken throughout life, with the aim of improving knowledge, skills and competences within a personal, civic, social, and/or employment-related perspective
Coven, R. Second International Handbook of Comparative Education. London: Springer https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Anthony_Welch3/publication/238486601_Mammon_Markets_and_Managerialism_-_Asia-Pacific_Perspectives_on_Contemporary_Educational_Reforms/links/578ca20d08ae7a588ef3afe3/Mammon-Markets-and-Managerialism-Asia-Pacific-Perspectives-on-Contemporary-Educational-Reforms.pdf#page=593

Adult learning

Adult learning is defined as ‘the entire range of formal, non-formal and informal learning activities which are undertaken by adults after a break since leaving initial education and training, and which results in the acquisition of new knowledge and skills
http://www3.hants.gov.uk/adult-learning-definition.pdf

Adult education

activities intentionally designed for the purpose of bringing about learning among those whose age, social roles, or self-perception define them as adults
Sharan B. Merriam and Ralph G. Brockett (1997: 8) http://infed.org/mobi/what-is-adult-education/