Continuity and Discontinuity in Learning Careers: Potentials for a Learning Space in a Changing World focuses on the new challenges and threats posed to adult education as a potential way out of the economic crisis and social change. It explores the role of adult education in relation to the continuity and discontinuity of the learning careers and identities of adults in a range of adult education learning contexts in Europe and beyond. The focus is on non-traditional students and issues of inequality such as class, gender, ethnicity, age, disability and how inequalities may enable or constrain their learning careers and identities.
1. Learning Careers and Transformative Learning: Challenges of Learning and Work in Neoliberal Spaces
âTed Fleming
Part 1: Continuity and Discontinuity in Formal Education
2. Friendship, Discourse and Belonging in the Studio: The Experiences of âNon-Traditionalâ Students in Design Higher Education
âSamantha Broadhead
3. English Language Book Club and Transformative Learning: Developing Critical Consciousness in the English Language Classroom in a UK Further Education (FE) College and in a South African Township
âIda Leal
Part 2: Continuity and Discontinuity in Social Institutions
4. Participation and Persistence: An Analysis of Underserved Students at UOIT
âAlyson King, Allyson Eamer and Nawal Ammar
5. Education Interrupted: Learning Careers of Adults Living with Mental Illness
âShanti Irene Fernando and Alyson E. King
6. Inmates in Higher Education in Italy and Spain: Legal, Cultural and Technological Issues in a Complex Network of Continuity and Discontinuity
âGiuseppe Pillera
Part 3: Continuity and Discontinuity around the Job Market
Part 4: Continuity and Discontinuity in Professional Contexts
12. Adultsâ Learning and Career Temporalities in the Analysis of Professionalisation and Professional Identity Construction
âPascal Roquet
13. Ways of Learning of Adult Educators in Uncertain Professional Contexts
âCatarina Paulos
14. No More Superheroes ⦠Only Avatars? Survival Role Play in English Post Compulsory Education
âCarol A. Thompson and Peter J. Wolstencroft
Conclusions
âAndrea Galimberti, Barbara Merrill, Adrianna Nizinska and Jose González-Monteagudo
All those interested in adult education and the challenges facing adult education today such as researchers in education and social sciences, undergraduate and postgraduate students, policy-makers and practitioners.