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Serving the Adult Learner: Increasing Opportunities & Improving Lives. Karen Steinberg Executive Vice President Council for Adult & Experiential Learning (CAEL) SHEEO Professional Development Conference August 17, 2005. What is CAEL?. Non-profit national organization established in 1974
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Serving the Adult Learner: Increasing Opportunities & Improving Lives Karen Steinberg Executive Vice President Council for Adult & Experiential Learning (CAEL) SHEEO Professional Development Conference August 17, 2005
What is CAEL? • Non-profit national organization established in 1974 • 700 members • Offices in Chicago, Denver, New York, Philadelphia • Diverse projects operating in nearly every state
CAEL’s Mission • CAEL pioneers learning strategies for individuals and organizations. We advance lifelong learning in partnership with educational institutions, employers, labor organizations, government, and communities. • CAEL works to remove policy and organizational barriers to learning opportunities, and identifies and disseminates effective practices.
CAEL Connects: CAEL’s Lifelong Learning Work Colleges and Universities Adult Learners Employers and Unions Government and Community CAEL’s Workforce Development Work CAEL’s Public Policy Work
Why Should States be Concerned @ Adult Learners? • Estimate that 38-45% of currently enrolled undergraduate degree seeking students have one or more characteristics of an “adult” • Estimate 68M adults (1/3 of adults 16 and older) took formal courses or training outside of traditional degree programs in 2002-03
Why Should States be Concerned @ the Adult Learner? • 56% of U.S. Population aged 25-64 has some education beyond high school • 16% of adults in US have not completed high school…in 5 states 1 in 5 has not completed high school and in an additional 12 states 1 in 6 has not • 70-80% of jobs in the near future will require some education beyond high school
Why Should States be Concerned @ the Adult Learner? Top States in the nation: 5.4% of their working age adults (25-49) enrolled in postsecondary education (Measuring Up 2002). This level of Adult Learning Engagement Will Not Meet States’ Workforce Needs in the Coming Years.
Adult Learner Barriers • Institutional: Policies and Practices that impede and discourage adult learners • Situational: Adult Learner’s life situation or circumstances • Dispositional: Adult Learner’s personal concerns, beliefs or attitudes
Adult Learning Focused Institutions: • Outreach • Life/Career Planning • Financing • Assessment of Learning Outcomes—PLA • Teaching Learning Process • Student Support Systems • Technology • Strategic Partnerships
Access Do State Policies encourage or hinder ‘Adult Friendly Practices’? • Financial Aid for Part-time Students • Equitable Funding for Community Colleges • Funding for ‘non-credit’ Developmental courses • Encourage Convenient Schedules & On-line Programs • Services nights and weekends • Recognition of Prior Learning
Public Policy Changes to Enhance Access • CAEL works to change public policy: • Lifelong Learning Accounts or LiLAs • Career Pathways Initiatives
LiLAs • Lifelong Learning Accounts (LiLA’s) are portable, individual asset accounts to finance education (similar to 401k accounts) • Employer matches each employee dollar • Both employer and employee would receive a tax benefit for the investment • Pilot demonstrations for LiLAs underway in three locations • CAEL is working with state action teams to design state-based LiLA models (Maine, Indiana, Illinois, Oklahoma, Hawaii).
Career Pathways Initiatives • A career pathway: • links educational programs with work, on-the-job training, and support services to enable workers to earn wages and attend college. • identifies jobs of importance to local employers. • brings together the resources needed to prepare workers to qualify for these positions. • provides stepping-stones for the entry and advancement of workers.
CAEL’s Experience Building Career Pathways • CAEL has helped state community college systems to build sector-specific career pathways and ensure that colleges have infrastructure in place to support these pathways. • CAEL created the Collaboration Tool Kit for use with multi-stakeholder action teams.
Examples of State-Level/System Policy Change • Kentucky: CAEL Developed Asset Map for Governor Patton’s “Poverty to Opportunity” Summit and Works with KCTCS on Career Pathways • Louisiana: CAEL Assisted Governor’s Workforce Commission with Inventory of Adult Learning Programs in State • Ohio: KnowledgeWorks Foundation Using CAEL and ALFI Tools as Resource for Building Career Pathways for Twelve Community Colleges and Targeted Industries
Workforce Development • CAEL works with over 60 companies and their employees in 40 states. • CAEL administers $130 million in tuition assistance benefits to 400,000 learners annually across the country and internationally. • CAEL advises over 150,000 employees annually about how and where to return to college to use their tuition benefits.
Influencing Employers’ Policies • CAEL is working to increase employers’ investment in learning and tuition • Broaden tuition policies beyond job-related learning • Pay up-front through a voucher or letter of credit system rather than through reimbursement
What Else? Strategic Importance of Paying Attention to Adult Learning in State and National Priorities • Link to Workforce & Economic Development—…The Pipeline won’t do it… • Policy Reviews and Consistent Data • Leverage Funding—Inventories and Asset Maps & Partnerships
For Further Information • Visit www.cael.org: Ksteinberg@cael.org