Women's Issues in Adult Education
Before beginning a discussion on women's issues in adult
education, it is useful to consider a working definition of adult education. The
Informal Education Homepage (Smith, 2007) quotes Darkenwald and Merriam (1982)
in stating:
Adult
education is concerned not with preparing people for life, but rather with
helping people to live more successfully. Thus if there is to be an overarching
function of the adult education enterprise, it is to assist adults to increase
competence, or negotiate transitions, in their social roles (worker, parent,
retiree etc.), to help them gain greater fulfilment in their personal lives,
and to assist them in solving personal and community problems.
This
essay will examine the varied and complex mechanisms by which the field of
adult education today remains insufficient in its inclusion and validation of
women and women's experiences in both practice and theory, thus falling short
of its goal of "helping people to live more successfully." Several
different ways in which adult education can be problematic for women will be
examined: in needs assessment and program planning, in our understanding of how
women learn, through barriers to women's participation in adult education, in
how we define the field of adult education and how we interpret its history,
and through historic failure to include women in adult education
administration. The essay will conclude with a re-examination of our working
definition, and with recommendations on possible remedies for the problems
described.
Women make up the majority of adult learners (Spencer,
2006). Still, consideration for women has been consistently left out of the
planning process in adult education. This is evidenced through the
"deficit model" approach often used by educators, which assumes that
learners must "catch up" with the rest of society or with their
peers, and potentially fails to consider the diverse knowledge and experience
that learners already bring to the learning environment. The result of this
failure is that too often, women feel a devaluation and a defeat which
sabotages what might otherwise be a useful learning experience. Unfortunately,
the literature in the field of adult education has been guilty of perpetuating
this deficit model (Hayes & Smith, 1994). Another way in which program
planning fails to consider women is through influence from corporate and
economic sponsorship on both formal education and human resources development
(HRD) (Bierema & Storberg-Walker, 2007; Miles, 1998; Thompson, 1996). The
corporate-sponsored model places male-oriented values such as aggression and
the seeking of profits and tangible results first. Women's contributions to the
informal economy are devalued.
Adult learning theory has also failed in the depth of its
consideration of gender differences in adult learners. Studies on women have
tended to observe only variations in the linear "adult life stages"
model used in describing men's development. Some researchers have proposed
entirely different ways of looking at the development of women. Caffarella
& Olsen (1993) urge the examination of women's social connectedness and
multiplicity of roles, as well as a reconsideration of the presumed linear
nature of adult development. They also urge that no theory can explain the full
breadth of women's experiences (this is likely true for men too).
Adult education has also unfortunately failed to consider
barriers to women's participation, whether these barriers come in the form of
role conflicts, economic or technological problems, or larger "macro"
level issues. The conflicting roles women play, e.g. as mother, wife, community
member, worker, and learner, have the potential to create conflicts that
distract from learning (Home, 1998). Women face economic barriers due to lower
earnings and technological barriers attributable to a "digital
divide" (lesser access to the technology needed to successfully
participate in education) (Kramarae, 2001). Finally, adult educators must
remain vigilant against the "macro-level" attitudinal barriers such
as reification, vilification, and subjugation (Stalker, 1998).
The professionalization of the field of adult education has
also been problematic. Women were very involved as educators and as learners in
the days when the field was first conceived as a profession (Thompson, 1996).
As the field became professionalized and journals and conferences devoted to it
began to appear, we began to see "the narrowing, over time, of the field's
notion of what constituted significant adult education and who were qualified
adult educators (Hugo, 1990)." The "circle effect", in which
women were not included in the circles of men who decided what was important in
adult education, saw to it that women were excluded from leadership positions
in the field and that its history be interpreted from a male perspective.
It is possible and desirable for the adult education
practitioner and researcher to recognize and accommodate for gender issues,
paying attention to the problems described here. Doing so will bring us closer
to meeting our working definition of "helping people live more successfully."
Inspired learning experiences can be planned which incorporate feminist pedagogies
(Tisdell, 1998), including transformational, constructivist and situated
learning. Potential barriers to women's learning can be accommodated. The adult educator should
plan ahead for possible role conflicts and develop the openness and the skills
necessary to identify and assist in working around these conflicts. Steps
should be taken to reduce financial barriers through aid programs, and
technological barriers reduced through accessible technical help. Adult
educators should remain vigilant in identifying and rectifying within
themselves and within those in their sphere of influence evidence of the
"macro-level" barriers mentioned here. Finally, it is imperative that adult
education researchers begin to recognize and incorporate research and practice
which not only includes or focuses on women, but also validates the informal,
non-formal, grassroots and social learning experiences that are so often
women-focused or women-driven:
By being
physically accessible and philosophically open to the new paradigms proposed by
groups such as environmentalists, feminists, indigenous peoples, adult
education can be strengthened in its ability to challenge neo-liberal
ascendancy and retain an autonomous self-definition that does not fall into the
easy traps posed by credentializing and formalizing a field that is necessarily
and preferably broad, diffuse and diverse (Miles, 1998).
References
Bierema, L. L., & Storberg-Walker, J.
(2007). Tracing HRD's Rational Masculine Roots: Feminist Alternatives for a More Mindful HRD. Adult Education Research Conference
Proceedings.
Retrieved November 5, 2007, from
http://www.adulterc.org/Proceedings/2007/Proceedings/Bierema_Storberg-Walker.pdf
Caffarella, R., & Olson, S. K.
(1993). Psychosocial Development of Women: A Critical Review of the Literature.
Adult Education Quarterly, 43(3), 125-151.
Home, A. M. (1998). Predicting Role
Conflict, Overload and Contagion in Adult Women University Students with
Families and Jobs. Adult Education Quarterly, 48(2), 85-97.
Hugo, J. M. (1990). Adult education
history and the issue of gender: toward a different history of adult education
in America. Adult Education Quarterly, 41(1), 1-16.
Kramarae, C. (2001). Excerpts from The
Third Shift: Women Learning Online. Retrieved November 11, 2007 from http://www.uoregon.edu/~cheris/third%20shift.pdf
Miles, A. (1998). Learning from the
Women's Movement in the Neo-Liberal Period. In Learning for Life (pp. 250-258). Toronto:
Thompson Educational Publishing.
Smith, M. K. (2007). Introducing Adult
Education. The Informal Education Homepage. Retrieved November 20, 2007, from
http://www.infed.org/lifelonglearning/b-adedgn.htm
Spencer, B. (2006). The Purposes of
Adult Education: A Short Introduction. Toronto: Thompson Educational Publishing.
Stalker, J. (1998). Women in the History
of Adult Education: Misogynist Responses to our Participation. In Learning
for Life
(pp. 238-249). Toronto: Thompson Educational Publishing.
Thompson, M. (1996). An historical and
linguistic analysis of women in the histories and the early literature of adult
education, 1926-1962 : toward a balanced historiography of the field. (Doctoral
dissertation, The Pennsylvania State University, 2001).
Tisdell,
E. J. (1998). Poststructural Feminist Pedagogies: The Possibilities and
Limitations of Feminist Emancipatory Adult Learning Theory and Practice. Adult
Education Quarterly, 48(3), 139-156.
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