Taylor, Edward W. “Cultural Institutions and Adult Education.” (2010)
Taylor, Edward W. “Cultural Institutions and Adult Education.” New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education 127 (2010): 5-14.
On any given day, hundreds of thousands of individuals, groups, and families visit libraries, parks, zoos, museums, and arboretums. Although quite diverse in their holdings, these places are linked together as institutions that focus on collecting, preserving, and/or presenting a body of knowledge (e.g., manuscripts, artifacts, documents, animals, plants, natural or historical landmarks) that is socially and culturally valued by a particular community. They preserve the history that is passed on to future generations; provide public places for learning, social change, and recreation; offer educational resources for formal education; and encourage lifelong learning. Most importantly, “cultural institutions--libraries, museums, historical societies, botanical gardens, archives, zoos, parks--are grounded in the idea that a culture requires places, forums, working laboratories for cognitive change” (Carr, 2000, pp. 117-118). Despite their ubiquitous presence, these institutions have been overlooked and poorly understood as complex sites of adult learning and teaching. This chapter explores cultural institutions as sites of adult education. As institutions of learning, they offer opportunities for expanding the study and promotion of lifelong learning beyond its more formal education boundaries. By stepping outside the formal setting, adult education takes on a more public face and broadens its reach and professional identity.
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