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Showing all 8 results
McNair, Stephen – Adults Learning, 2012
In the current climate, the launch of the new National Careers Service in England is a cheering ray of light in a gloomy world. Despite fierce constraints on public spending, the government has secured the resources, and political will, and the Skills Funding Agency is now funding a service, which provides online and phone guidance to adults and…
Descriptors: Adult Educators, Foreign Countries, Careers, Guidance
McNair, Stephen – Adults Learning, 2011
The battle for an adequate careers guidance service for adults has been a long one. A succession of governments have been formally committed to lifelong learning, to broadening choice and diversity in education and training, and to asking individuals to take more control of (and pay more for) their education, but only in the last few years have…
Descriptors: Careers, Publicity, Guidance Programs, Lifelong Learning
McNair, Stephen – Adults Learning, 2010
Certainly, there are people who can't wait to leave work, and people with grand plans for retirement. There are also people who have worked a long time in a stressful environment or doing heavy manual work, or who live in a poor community, and whose life expectancy is much shorter. But most people in their 50s say that they would like to work…
Descriptors: Retirement, Rewards, Work Environment, Adult Educators
McNair, Stephen – Adults Learning, 2009
Adult learning happens in many places and forms, and is paid for by a complex mix of public, employer and private funds. National Institute of Adult Continuing Education's recent survey of public attitudes to paying for lifelong learning shows clearly that people have not convinced the general public that adult learning deserves more public…
Descriptors: Continuing Education, Lifelong Learning, Adult Learning, Public Support
McNair, Stephen – Adults Learning, 2009
The ageing of society is one of the biggest policy challenges of this time. Growing life expectancy and low birth rates mean that, for the fist time in human history, most people, and certainly the more prosperous social groups, will be spending a third of their lives in "retirement". This has profound social, cultural and economic implications,…
Descriptors: Quality of Life, Adult Education, Adult Learning, Aging (Individuals)
McNair, Stephen – Adults Learning, 2009
Last year's Foresight report on mental capital and wellbeing has prompted much debate on the emergence of wellbeing as a key aim of public policy. For adult learning, obliged for so many years to justify its existence in economic terms, this should be good news, but it will be hard to shift ministers away from a narrow notion of "skills". It is…
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Public Policy, Well Being, Psychological Patterns
McNair, Stephen – Adults Learning (England), 1996
Issues in funding adult higher education in Britain include (1) complexity of methodology; (2) discrimination against part-time study; (3) reward for teaching quality; (4) need for guidance services; (5) resources for innovation; (6) funding for noncredit programs; and (7) open and flexible delivery. A funding model based on input, process, and…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Adult Education, Educational Finance, Foreign Countries
McNair, Stephen – Adults Learning (England), 1995
A lifelong funding model for higher education would finance "foundation" education from public funds and "continuing" education primarily privately. Paying for tuition and living expenses would be separated, and foundation costs would be handled by vouchers in small units, so learners could have flexibility in their use. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Students, Continuing Education, Educational Change, Educational Finance

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