Continuing and higher education
Abstract
This thesis attempts to explain the apparent contradiction between what is
said and what is done about providing adult and continuing education in an
Australian university. It does this firstly by tracing the historical
development of adult and continuing education in Australian universities
with emphasis on Sydney University, the institution with the longest
tradition in this field. Over the past ten years there has been a shift
from liberal adult education towards continuing professional education
largely as a result of the tremendous gains in education across all sectors
of society since 1945, and the implications this has as educated people
seek more opportunity for learning. The thesis then reviews recent changes
to the nature of provision of continuing education in other Australian
universities which reveals a dismantling of specialised continuing
education in preference for the less expensive, integrated approach whereby
established faculties and departments take on responsibility for continuing
education. These changes have been accompanied by a rhetoric of support
for the concept of continuing education by institutions. The basis of such contradiction is analysed by using a four part framework
focussing on the different perspectives of continuing education and higher
education. The major dimensions on which these differences are analysed
are; role and orientation; the nature of academic work; organisational
focus and decision making; and, administration and resource provision.
An indepth study of the history of adult and continuing education at the
Australian National University (ANU) reveals that the contradictions
evident in other Australian universities reviewed earlier are also evident
at the ANU.
The thesis concludes in three ways first with a comment on the
iinplications of a recent report by the Commonwealth Tertiary Education
Commission (CTEC) on non-award adult and continuing education in Australia as it relates to higher education. The findings of the CTEC report on the
organisational aspects of the provision of continuing education by
universities is consistent with the findings of the thesis. Secondly it
concludes that the framework for analysis identified helps to understand
the basis for action in the ANU regarding the management and resourcing of
its Cent re for Continuing Education. We _suggest that the framework
requires more work for better understanding of the dynamic relationship
between the two fundamental categories; role and orientation and the
nature of academic work and the other categories; organisational focus and
decision making, and administration and resource provision . Finally it
concludes on the strategic implications of universities withdrawing from
continuing education; becoming less relevant to the needs of an ever
changing society, receiving less, real term funding, and aiding in the
increase of a range of other organisational interests in continuing
education including, professional, community, other governmental and
commercial organisations.
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