| A variety of sources provides us with a body of fairly reliable knowledge
about adult learning. This knowledge might be divided into three basic
divisions: things we know about adult learners and their motivation,
things we know about designing curriculum for adults, and things we know
about working with adults in the classroom.
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| Motivation to Learn |
- Adults seek out learning experiences in order to cope with specific
life-changing events--e.g., marriage, divorce, a new job, a promotion,
being fired, retiring, losing a loved one, moving to a new city.
- The more life change events an adult encounters, the more likely
he or she is to seek out learning opportunities. Just as stress
increases as life-change events accumulate, the motivation to cope
with change through engagement in a learning experience increases.
- The learning experiences adults seek out on their own are directly
related - at least in their perception - to the life-change events that
triggered the seeking.
- Adults are generally willing to engage in learning experiences before,
after, or even during the actual life change event. Once convinced that
the change is a certainty, adults will engage in any learning that
promises to help them cope with the transition.
- Adults who are motivated to seek out a learning experience do so
primarily because they have a use for the knowledge or skill being
sought. Learning is a means to an end, not an end in itself.
- Increasing or maintaining one's sense of self-esteem and pleasure are
strong secondary motivators for engaging in learning experiences.
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| Curriculum Design |
- Adult learners tend to be less interested in, and enthralled by,
survey courses. They tend to prefer single concept, single-theory courses
that focus heavily on the application of the concept to relevant
problems. This tendency increases with age.
- Adults need to be able to integrate new ideas with what they already
know if they are going to keep - and use - the new information.
- Information that conflicts sharply with what is already held to be
true, and thus forces a re-evaluation of the old material, is integrated
more slowly.
- Information that has little "conceptual overlap" with what is already
known is acquired slowly.
- Fast-paced, complex or unusual learning tasks interfere with the
learning of the concepts or data they are intended to teach or illustrate.
- Adults tend to compensate for being slower in some psychomotor
learning tasks by being more accurate and making fewer trial-and-error
ventures.
- Adults tend to take errors personally and are more likely to let them
affect self-esteem. Therefore, they tend to apply tried-and-true
solutions and take fewer risks.
- The curriculum designer must know whether the concepts or ideas will
be in concert or in conflict with the learner. Some instruction must be
designed to effect a change in belief and value systems.
- Programs need to be designed to accept viewpoints from people in
different life stages and with different value "sets."
- A concept needs to be "anchored" or explained from more than one
value set and appeal to more than one developmental life stage.
- Adults prefer self-directed and self-designed learning projects over
group-learning experiences led by a professional, they select more than
one medium for learning, and they desire to control pace and start/stop
time.
- Nonhuman media such as books, programmed instruction and television
have become popular with adults in recent years.
- Regardless of media, straightforward how-to is the preferred content
orientation. Adults cite a need for application and how-to information as
the primary motivation for beginning a learning project.
- Self-direction does not mean isolation. Studies of self-directed
learning indicate that self-directed projects involve an average of 10
other people as resources, guides, encouragers and the like. But even for
the self-professed, self-directed learner, lectures and short seminars
get positive ratings, especially when these events give the learner
face-to-face, one-to-one access to an expert.
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| In the Classroom |
- The learning environment must be physically and psychologically
comfortable; long lectures, periods of interminable sitting and the
absence of practice opportunities rate high on the irritation scale.
- Adults have something real to lose in a classroom situation.
Self-esteem and ego are on the line when they are asked to risk trying a
new behavior in front of peers and cohorts. Bad experiences in
traditional education, feelings about authority and the preoccupation
with events outside the classroom affect in-class experience.
- Adults have expectations, and it is critical to take time early on to
clarify and articulate all expectations before getting into content. The
instructor can assume responsibility only for his or her own
expectations, not for those of students.
- Adults bring a great deal of life experience into the classroom, an
invaluable asset to be acknowledged, tapped and used. Adults can learn
well -and much - from dialogue with respected peers.
- Instructors who have a tendency to hold forth rather than facilitate
can hold that tendency in check--or compensate for it--by concentrating
on the use of open-ended questions to draw out relevant student knowledge
and experience.
- New knowledge has to be integrated with previous knowledge; students
must actively participate in the learning experience. The learner is
dependent on the instructor for confirming feedback on skill practice;
the instructor is dependent on the learner for feedback about curriculum
and in-class performance.
- The key to the instructor role is control. The instructor must
balance the presentation of new material, debate and discussion, sharing
of relevant student experiences, and the clock. Ironically, it seems that
instructors are best able to establish control when they risk giving it
up. When they shelve egos and stifle the tendency to be threatened by
challenge to plans and methods, they gain the kind of facilitative
control needed to effect adult learning.
- The instructor has to protect minority opinion, keep disagreements
civil and unheated, make connections between various opinions and ideas,
and keep reminding the group of the variety of potential solutions to the
problem. The instructor is less advocate than orchestrator.
- Integration of new knowledge and skill requires transition time and
focused effort on application.
- Learning and teaching theories function better as resources than as a
Rosetta stone. A skill-training task can draw much from the behavioral
approach, for example, while personal growth-centered subjects seem to
draw gainfully from humanistic concepts. An eclectic, rather than a
single theory-based approach to developing strategies and procedures, is
recommended for matching instruction to learning tasks.
The next five years will eclipse the last fifty in terms of hard data production on adult
learning. For the present, we must recognize that adults want their learning to be
problem-oriented, personalized and accepting of their need for self-direction and personal
responsibility.
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