TRANSFORMING OLDER ADULT EDUCATION: AN EMERGING PARADIGM FROM A NATIONWIDE STUDY
- 1 January 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Educational Gerontology
- Vol. 21 (6) , 613-632
- https://doi.org/10.1080/0360127950210606
Abstract
Educational opportunities for older adults have changed dramatically in the past 20 years due, in part, to the rise of new institutions (e.g., learning in retirement institutes, Shepherd's Centers, OASIS institutes) and modification to earlier programs based in senior centers and community colleges. Little systematic research has examined the shared characteristics of these program types—how the are organized, funded, governed and so on. In response, with funding from the AARP Andrus Foundation, a national study of older adult education organizations was conducted during 1992‐1993. A “Critical Pathways Taxonomy” was devised in surveying 260 organizations that provide educational programs for seniors. Five program models were studied and compared. New roles for older learners were identified in areas of planning, teaching, governance, and community service. The study suggests that a new paradigm of older adult education is emerging.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- LATE‐LIFE LEARNERS AT THE UNIVERSITY: THE DONOVAN SCHOLARS PROGRAM AT AGE TWENTY‐FIVEEducational Gerontology, 1993
- NEW ROLES AND NORMS FOR OLDER ADULTS THROUGH HIGHER EDUCATIONEducational Gerontology, 1993
- Free Tuition for EldersJournal of Aging & Social Policy, 1991
- MOTIVATIONS FOR EDUCATIONAL PARTICIPATION BY RETIREES: THE EXPRESSIVE‐INSTRUMENTAL CONTINUUM REVISITEDEducational Gerontology, 1989
- A COMPARISON OF ELDERLY COLLEGE STUDENTS IN TWO GEOGRAPHICALLY DIFFERENT AREASEducational Gerontology, 1983
- Development of Educational Programs for Older Adult Learners: A State PerspectiveThe Gerontologist, 1983
- Education Participation Scale Factor Structure for Older AdultsAdult Education, 1978
- Survival Needs of the Aged: Implications for Program PlanningAging and Human Development, 1971