Workforce Brief

The Adult Education Mission

Adult education has historically funded numbers of activities but two are most central to its mission: basic skills education (basic English, math, and English as a Second language training, including supporting individuals to acquire a high school diploma or GED) and short-term vocational education. As the LAO’s report suggests, both functions are in need of reexamination, however this brief focuses only on basic skills education.

Description

Report Author: The California EDGE Coalition
Date: December 2012
Website: www.californiaedgecoalition.org

The Legislative Analyst’s Office recently released a new paper, “Restructuring California’s Adult Education System,” which calls out the urgent need to re-think this state’s adult education program. The subject could not be more important or timely, particularly as funding for the program continues to erode. To learn more, download the full text of the article here.

Principles of an Effective Program

Integration: The Adult Education program, community college noncredit basic skills programs, and community college credit basic skills programs must be tightly integrated so students are not forced to take duplicative, disconnected courses.

Opportunity: Basic skills courses should link students to career technical and academic pathways that provide them the opportunity to continue their education.

Flexibility: Rigidly defining students by “levels” slows progress and wastes time and money; instead interventions should be flexibly tailored to the needs of students.

Student support: Basic skills students are much more likely to be successful if they receive adequate counseling, peer group support, and financial aid.

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More Reports from the California EDGE Colalition

California EDGE Coalition Releases Policy Brief on New Educational Approach to Serving Low-Skill Adult Learners

. A new policy brief released by the California EDGE Coalition examines the ways in which other states are now successfully employing competency-based approaches to teaching and learning which allow students to move flexibly – and often much more quickly – through an educational program that is designed to make sure they know and can do what is expected of graduates.

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