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2012 | 2 | 2-3 | 4-11

Article title

Transitions in lifelong learning: public issues, private troubles, liminal identities

Authors

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
The paper seeks to reconceptualise the significance of transitions in adult learning. It combines reflection on existing research with an analysis of original data on adults' experiences of significant educational transitions. The paper starts by considering how lifelong learning and mobilities of various kinds have become absorbed into, and expressed in, the policy mainstream. It then discusses the ways in which researchers are addressing this topic. While researchers are pursuing many lines of inquiry into transitions, and using a wide range of methods (including new statistical techniques), the analysis in this paper is primarily concerned with questions of identity, and particularly the idea of learner identity. I then briefly illustrate the analysis with cases from a research project that is designed to explore aspects of a very specific pair of transitions: movement into, and then through, the higher education system among a group of people who can be defined as non-traditional students. The paper concludes by proposing the idea of a liminal identity, understood as shaped through social and cultural processes which are formed and re-formed in dynamic relationships with others. This perspective has implications for practice as well as for research.

Publisher

Year

Volume

2

Issue

2-3

Pages

4-11

Physical description

Dates

published
2012-01-01
online
2012-04-03

Contributors

author
  • School of Education, University of Stirling, Scotland

References

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  • Alheit, P. and Dausien, B. (2002). The ‘Double Face’ of Lifelong Learning: Two analytical perspectives on a silent revolution. Studies in the Education of Adults, 34(1), 3-22
  • Bauman, Z. (2005). Learning to walk in quicksands. In: A. Bron, E. Kurantowicz, H. Salling Olesen and L. West (Eds.), ‘Old’ and ‘New’ Worlds of Adult Learning. Wrocław: Wydawnictwo Naukowe
  • Biesta, G., Field, J. Hodkinson, P., Macleod, F. and Goodson, I. (2011). Improving Learning through the Lifecourse. London and New York: Routledge
  • Bron, A. (2007). Learning, language and transition. In L. West, P. Alheit, A. S. Anderson and B. Merrill (Eds.), Using Biographical and Life History Approaches in the Study of Adult and Lifelong Learning. Frankfurt-am-Main: Peter Lang
  • Dominicé, P. (2000). Learning from Our Lives: Using Educational Biographies with Adults. San Francisco: Jossey Bass
  • Du Bois-Reymond, M. et al. (1994). Life course transitions and future orientations of Dutch youth. Young, 2(1), 3-20
  • Ecclestone, K. (2010). ‘Managing and supporting the vulnerable self’. In: Ecclestone, K., Biesta, G. and Hughes, M. (2010). Transitions and Learning through the Lifecourse. London and New York: Routledge
  • Ecclestone, K., Biesta, G. and Hughes, M. (2010). Transitions and Learning through the Lifecourse. London and New York: Routledge
  • Edwards, R. (1997). Changing Places: Flexibility, lifelong learning and a learning society. London and New York: Routledge
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  • Faure, E. et al. (1972). Learning to be. The world of education today and tomorrow. Paris: UNESCO.
  • Field, J. (2006). Lifelong Learning and the New Educational Order. Stoke: Trentham
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  • Field, J., Gallacher, J. and Ingram, R. (2010). Researching Transitions in Lifelong Learning. London and New York: Routledge
  • Field, J. and Morgan-Klein, N. (2010) Studenthood and identification: higher education as a liminal transitional space. Standing Conference on University Teaching and Research in the Education of Adults, University of Warwick, available at
  • Glastra, F., Hake, B. and Schedler, P. (2004). Lifelong learning as transitional learning, Adult Education Quarterly, 54(3), 291-307[WoS]
  • Merrill, B. and West L. (2009). Using Biographical Methods in Social Research. London: Sage
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  • Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (1997). Lifelong learning for all. Paris: OECD.
  • Quinn, J. (2010). Learning Communities and Imagined Social Capital. London: Continuum[WoS]
  • Schmid, H. (2008). Managing transitions: lifelong guidance in the European space. Conference on a European Model of Lifelong Guidance, Lyon, available at
  • Schoon, I. (2006). Risk and Resilience: Adaptations in chnging times. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
  • Scottish Government (2004). Analysis of Ethnicity in the 2001 Census. Edinburgh: Scottish Government.
  • Scottish Government (2010). Age Participation Index for Scotland 2008-2009. Glasgow: Scottish Government.
  • Stauber, B. (2004). Junge Frauen und Männer in Jugendkulturen: Selbstinszenierungen und Handlungspotentiale. Opladen: Leske und Budrich
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  • Walther, A. (2006). Regimes of Youth Transitions: Choice, flexibility and security in young people's experiences across different European contexts. Young, 14(2), 119-39
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Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.doi-10_2478_v10240-012-0001-6
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