
Readings in Post-compulsory Education
Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
Published on 22. February 2007
Book
Paperback/Softback
224 pages
978-0-8264-9354-5 (ISBN)
Description
The editors provide an illuminating commentary to eleven key articles covering the main issues affecting the post-compulsory education sector today. Contributions include an analysis of what influences students to drop out from their learning programs, how the participation of hard-to-reach learners can be widened, how adults with basic skills can be encouraged to learn, and how research can help make sense of the 'muddle' of middle management in Further Education colleges.
Reviews / Votes
"This book is, over and above anything else, a personal book -- and although the research ranges from small scale qualitative to large scale quantitative, within each paper we can 'hear' the voices of practitioner-researchers. It is also a political book -- not promoting one concerted message for change in any particular area, but on its desire to push the need to create and use this kind of research to effect change, to influence policy, and to shape the future of the sector... One of the aims of this book is to represent a guide, a first step perhaps, towards the creation of such a research-informed profession. Although such notions may seem a little optimistic or grandiose, the quality of the papers presented in this book, and the realities they explore, do leave you with a sense that with such dedicated practitioner-researchers as these this may not be so farfetched." Reviewed by Rebecca Hodgson in Higher Education Review, Summer 2008 'These varied readings are clearly aimed at two groups. On one hand, there are those who wish to begin researching in the lifelong learning sector, engage with contemporary debates or get a feel for the ways in which research can effectively be part and parcel of professional practice. On the other hand the texts tackle a number of key areas in ways which provide food for thought for more experienced researchers... The quality of the articles and editing is of course high, as one would expect from the authors and publisher' The Teacher Trainer "This interesting collection of papers is the product of a series of important conferences organized by the Learning and Skills Research Network (LSRN) over a seven year period. The conferences were a vital means of highlighting the developing research culture in the Learning and Skills sector. These papers offer a fascinating insight into the way in which practitioners in the sector gradually began to engage in research themselves and to overcome some of the perceived barriers to doing so. At a time when further change is expected, the need to ensure that a strong research dimension is encouraged and supported is critical and these papers demonstrate just how much potential exists in further education for the development of a vibrant action research culture which could provide much needed evidence to support effective structural change. This is a valuable collection of papers." Educational Review, December 2009 "The quality of the articles and editing is of course high, as one would expect from the authors and publisher." Mr Christian Beighton 23 February 2009 * ESCalate *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Target group
College/higher education
Postgraduate
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 140 mm
Thickness: 13 mm
Weight
310 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-8264-9354-5 (9780826493545)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Yvonne Hillier is Acting HOD at City University and co-ordinator of the LSRN. Anne Thompson is Vice Principal of Waltham Forest College and member of the LSRN.
Content
Preface - Andrew Morris; 1. A Case for Practitioner Research - Peter Davies and Leo Salter (Cornwall College); 2. Research Workplace Basic Skills Policy in the UK - Fiona Frank (Cartmel College, Lancaster); 3. Research Journeys: Learners' Views on Progress and Achievement in Literacy and Numeracy - Jane Ward (Consultant); 4. Destination Drop Out: Long Term Impact of Drop Out from Full-Time Education - Helen Kenwright (York College); 5. Beyond Common Sense to a Common Sense - Christine Tyler (Eccles College, Manchester); 6. Action Research: A Model for Improvement? - Sue Cousin (DfES); 7. Fomulating 'Facts' about Flexibility in Further Education - Roger Harrison, Julia Clarke and Mahnaz Marashi (all at The Open University); 8. Insider to Outsider: A Personal Research Journey - Ros Clow (Westminster Institute of Education); 9. The Potential for Realism as a Best Methodological Option - Norman Crowther (Cambridge Regional College); 10. Attitude Measurement to Bridge the Post-16 Gap - Glen Williams, Bob Whittome and Phil Watts (Educational Psychologists P.A.S.S.).