Saturday, September 3, 2011

Art for Lifelong Learning


Today I read a chapter on a newly bought book and the first book on my area of study entitled “Contexts of Adult Education: Canadian Perspective”, edited by Tara Fenwick, Tom Nesbit and Bruce Spencer and published by Thomson Educational Publishing, Inc. The chapter that I read today was my interest because it was written by Prof. Jane Dawson and Prof. Shauna Butterwick as the latter is the one who is going to teach the first class on September 6, 2011 in the UBC.

The name of the chapter is “Adult Education and the Arts”. As the name suggest, the chapter deals with how adults can be and are being educated through arts. The authors furnish their chapters with a lot of Canadian practices in educating its adult population through the medium of documentary films, storytelling, theatre, drama and so on.

The chapter gave me basically two basic perspectives to see adult education. Firstly, art is an inevitable part of human life. It is not an obligatory thing that one should be a professional artist to be educated and it is also not true that one must have artistic skills to educate others. Art is a human passion and a life in itself. There is not a human being who is devoid of art. In every culture, in every nook and cranny of this world there are arts and people are following them. Art has a long history and it is the most significant part of human culture and a way of learning too.

Secondly, I saw art through the perspective of lifelong learning. For me adult education is a part of lifelong learning. By reflecting on the reading of this chapter now I can rightly say that art is an inevitable part for fostering lifelong learning. One of the reasons, knowingly or unknowingly, lifelong learning has survived as a tacit way of learning because of the arts people have been following from the very beginning of their civilization. For instance, the skill of carpentry, the skill of tanning leathers and many other skills survived and matured through generational learning. Undoubtedly it has been getting transferred to this day from grandparents to parents and parents to their siblings. Now, the work of present generation is to make it more systematic and make people more professional. Now such skills need technological fitting in right manners.

Needless to mention, all people irrespective of their age, sex, race, culture and so are fanatic towards one or other forms of art. Some people may like music, some people may like drama and some people may like film. Every country rich and poor, small and big have to make learning opportunities available through such and such forms of art. Developing countries like Nepal have to take an approach at national level probably an agenda like “Lifelong Learning through Art”. One of the most important advantages of this approach would be learning for all goes through the medium of entertainments.

I acknowledge Prof Butterwick and Prof Dawson.

Thanks!!!

Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Thoughts on lifelong learning

The basic concept of lifelong learning is that the very foundation of human transformation is learning and it is the basic tenet of our ancestor "home sapiens". They learnt throughout their lives and endowed their generation with such trait of learning. That is why the world today is in such a stage of science and technology. This techno-society needs more learning opportunities and commitments than ever before. The life of modern Homo sapiens have become more and more challenging. To face these we need to be a lifelong learner and it is possible only when our society turns into a learning society.

Are all people ready to be lifelong learners? Are all societies ready to be learning societies? The answer may be yes. But it is a bitter fact that all of them do not have basic prerequisites to be lifelong learner and make their society a learning society. It is always believed that education is the fundamental rights of every individual, moreover, to achieve all other human rights people must have education and education comes through learning and the learning is and shouldn’t be limited to formal learning. From the inception of UNESCO it has recognized that education should be neither the privilege of an elite nor a matter for one age group only, rather it should be both universal and lifelong  (Young & Valdes-Cotera, 2011).

Despite the fact that every individual, every society and every country want to pursue a best economic prosperity and provide a best condition to learn to its citizen, there is a great disparity in several factors including the learning condition. UNESCO’s Medium Term Strategy (2008-2013) contends that development and economic prosperity depends on countries ability to educate all their citizens (Young & Valdes-Cotera, 2011). Hence the economic prosperity of every developing country depends on the learning environment it provides to its citizen irrespective of age, time and places to learn.

Some of the countries have developed a strong mechanism for creating good learning conditions. For example Canadians have made important contributions to early formulations concerning lifelong learning education and are today committed to fostering democratic forms of learning in a broad array of informal, non-formal and formal settings (Young & Valdes-Cotera, 2011)

Monday, August 29, 2011

My new blog on lifelong learning

Now, I am at Ponderosa H, in Room No. 126. I am working under professor Rubenson. I have started this blog at 3:25 PM and will be blogging on Adult Education and Lifelong Learning.