Learning trajectories: travelling towards a learning society?1
- 1 November 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in International Journal of Lifelong Education
- Vol. 17 (6) , 400-410
- https://doi.org/10.1080/0260137980170606
Abstract
This paper uses the results of a large‐scale study of patterns of participation in post‐compulsory education and training over the past 50 years to identify some of the social determinants of adult participation in formal learning experiences. The patterns of participation are presented in the form of predictable lifelong ‘trajectories’, and the predictability of these patterns of participation is as important a finding as their determinants. The key predictors themselves can be discerned quite early in an individuals life since they comprise the period in which the person was born, their place of birth and subsequent migration patterns, their gender, their family background, their experience of initial schooling, and the interactions between them. The patterns of participation and their changes over time are used to reinforce doubts about the wisdom of seeing a Learning Society as simply a worthwhile future goal, towards the implementation of which current policy is directed, and towards which the UK is travelling in linear fashion by apparently increasing opportunities for, while removing barriers to, lifelong participation.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
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- The Effectiveness of the Youth Training Scheme as a Manpower PolicyEconomica, 1990