Distance Learning
Introductory remarks and objectives of proposed research
Education is -- if we have any recollection of our classical language training -- supposed to be a drawing out rather than a putting in, which would seem to make it at least as an appropriate activity for adults as for children. Adults have their far greater basis of experience than do children and so are in many ways much more easily educated (Ravitch 2000).
Education is, after all, not simply the acquisition of facts but their synthesis as well, the creative and unique ways of putting together information about the world that those with experience in the world can achieve. Education may well be -- as it is often humorously argued -- wasted on the young, not because of any inherent fault of their own but because their range of experience is so narrow that it is difficult for them to make the best use of the facts that they are given. Unconnected to experiences and without an already established framework of other knowledge about the way in which the world works, the facts presented to the young in the course of their education are often like expensive crystal goblets sliding unanchored on a silver tray. It is almost inevitable that some of them will fall off and be smashed.
And yet, of course, young people do need to be educated, especially as the technologies of daily life and the workplace become increasingly complicated and demanding. There is so much to learn in a lifetime that if we do not begin the process of education at an early age it will be impossible ever to gain enough knowledge about the world to make our contributions. However, there is no reason that education for the child cannot be supplemented by education for the adult. This proposal outlines a research project to determine if...
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