The purpose of my mobility was to connect with other policy influencers, advocates, and practitioners from across Europe to discuss best practice, what’s changing, and what we can do as a collective across borders, in order to make adult education, and lifelong learning more accessible in all corners of our continent.
Presentations at the event included inputs from several engaging speakers which I have listed below. From these inputs the most important takeaway I had was that for adult education to get the policy and funding support it deserves we need to shift the thinking of policy makers away from seeing education as a tool only for employment but instead as a tool necessary for the development of a strong social fabric, of which one element of success is economic. This takeaway is not of course new. However, through speakers like Alex Stevenson who spoke about a joint project focusing on life skills; or Lene Rachel Andersen, author of a new book The Nordic Secret, who spoke about adult education and folk high schools as a the basis for lifting Denmark specifically and Scandinavia generally out of 19th century economic collapse, it was possible to see new policy frames which can be used across Europe generally and in Ireland specifically. These new frames for evaluating policy options for adult education and lifelong learning should be able to help us make our arguments to politicians and public servants in Ireland who too often view the metrics for education success as employment outcomes, and number of certifications and other accreditation earned.
Speakers at the EAEA General Assembly and Conference included the following:
- Anna Nikowska, DG EMPL, European Commission, Participation in adult learning in Europe: new trends and developments; and New policy developments in adult education at the EU level
- Katarina Popovic, ICAE, The future of global policies in adult learning
- Lene Rachel Andersen, Author of The Nordic Secret
- Alex Stevenson, Learning and Work Institute UK, Presenting findings of the Life Skills Project
My time in Copenhagen was wonderful. It is a beautiful city with amazing history and a positive story about adult education that is and must continuously be told across the rest of Europe. The EAEA General Assembly and Conference highlighted these points for me and provided renewed inspiration about how we can advocate for the right of all adults in Ireland to quality learning throughout their lives, and to promote the value and benefits of lifelong learning.
As an EU Member State, Ireland has access to EU funding programmes like Erasmus+ which support people to acquire new work skills, contributing to active citizenship, and personal development. Such programmes allow AONTAS to support our members to promote and profile the work of adult learning in Ireland. It also provides our members with an opportunity to learn from our EU neighbours and bring new ideas back to Ireland.
For more information on this project please contact Dearbháil Lawless, EU Projects Officer at: dlawless@aontas.com
