EN
The genesis of adult education in Europe reaches back to the second half of the 18th century. It was then that alongside the development of industry appeared a necessity to teach factory workers to read and write. Most of them were illiterate peasants. An interest would arise among workers to gain some basic knowledge about natural sciences, technique, economics, history, and hygiene. The peasants, sunk in illiteracy, gradually began to feel educational needs, which made them undertake ever new initiative in this regard. In Poland, partitioned among the three dividing parties in the 19th century, the satisfaction of educational needs of the impaired strata was additionally made difficult by the invaders who made it impossible to teach in Polish. Educational initiatives would take on a character of selfeducation. The latter was also pursued by secondary school pupils, students and women, mainly home teachers, deprived of an access to universities. All the above mentioned forms of adult education had a compensatory character, i.e. they replaced school education, which these people lacked during childhood and adolescence. Now the function of adult education has changed. In view of the obligatory character of education, encompassing obligatory education of all children and adolescents on the elementary level and in some countries also on the secondary level, adult education fulfills its proper function, i.e. satisfies various educational and cultural needs of adults. Thus it has become an integral part of educational systems. This is in accord with the idea of permanent education, formulated and popularized within the frameworks of UNESCO in the second half of the 20th century.