The Benefits Of Adult Education

1041 Words3 Pages

Many more adults are returning back to school in order to pursuit a degree or to resume with their unfinished studies. Whichever the case may be, adult education has become more popular now days than it was 20 or 30 years ago and as the result many more schools are creating programs that focus more on andragogy (adult education) teaching programs. In which the adult student can learn by applying some of the most important principals of adult learning, making the learning experience more enjoyable, practical and convenient to the student.
The term “andragogy” comes from the Greek, meaning: man-leading in contrast to the term pedagogy which translates to: child-leading. Although the term has been around for quite some time since it was first used by a German educator, Alexander Kapp around 1833 (Geraldine Holmes and Michele Abington-Cooper, 2000) It was not until the early 70’s t that term strongly reemerged through the work of Malcolm Shepherd Knowles, an American psychologist and adult educator who believed that when it comes to teaching, adults need to be teach in a different way than …show more content…

Since adults need to have a real “motor” to further the education and learn on new things, they not only need to know the value and the relevance in their learning process but they also need to see the rewards as wells, since most adults return back to school to earn a higher pay or obtain a promotion. Adults want to make sure that the new material or information acquired is meaningful and how this will help them in their future, which is why they question the need to learn something before the take up on the task. According to Christina Fisher from Learning Solution Magazine, adults find motivation to learn within the demands and desires of their lives, in providing for themselves and their families, and in satisfying personal dreams and ambitions (Christina Fisher,

Open Document