ISBN-13: 9780415547215 / Angielski / Twarda / 2009 / 244 str.
ISBN-13: 9780415547215 / Angielski / Twarda / 2009 / 244 str.
There are two key questions at the heart of the ongoing debate about education and training for all young people, irrespective of background, ability or attainment:
The question ‘What makes an educated 19 year old?’ is central to the ongoing debate on the renewal of education and training for all young people, irrespective of background, ability or attainment. Universal consensus on the answers to the question are unlikely, given that those involved in the debate inhabit different moral traditions. This book emphasises the need to examine whether the models of education we have inherited from the past are sufficient to meet the needs of all young people, as well as and the social and economic needs of the wider community into which they are entering, in the face of an unpredictable future.
Authored by six co-directors of the Nuffield Review of 14-19 Education and Training, this book addresses this question in the light of evidence collected over five years by the most thorough investigation of every aspect of 14-19 education and training to date. This independent and comprehensive review of evidence addresses the fundamental aims of education, examines the quality of learning and its assessment in schools and colleges and questions the established framework of qualifications. It also analyses the individual’s progression through the various and often confusing routes into higher education, employment and further training and explores the problems of those disengaged from formal learning.
The authors make recommendations for a changed provision of education and training and call for a radical change in policy and decision making. Rooted in critical analysis of developments in the present and recent past, the book explores the kind of education and training which should be provided over the coming decade and beyond.