ABSTRACT

First published in 1992, Experiential Learning was written to explore in detail the ways in which the assessment and accreditation of prior and current experiential learning (APEL) was being practised in higher education, further education, community and voluntary provision, training organisations and employment, in provision for the unemployed, youth training schemes, and for updating and retraining.

The book argues that individuals can be encouraged and motivated to learn if they are enabled to develop a due sense of their own capacity to learn. It looks at the background of APEL in Britain, and explores its progression into a day-to-day concern for policy-makers and providers of formal courses and training and development programmes in many sectors. It also considers how APEL can be used alongside other economic and social developments to improve the organisation and the provision of opportunities for learning at the post-secondary stage.

Experiential Learning will appeal to those with an interest in the history and theory of the assessment and accreditation of experiential learning.

part I|56 pages

Beginnings: a personal story

chapter 1|6 pages

The American dimension

chapter 2|6 pages

The British dimension

chapter 3|31 pages

APEL in action begins

chapter 4|11 pages

Reflections

part II|59 pages

A decade of APEL

chapter 5|7 pages

Introduction

chapter 7|31 pages

APEL and higher education

chapter 8|13 pages

APEL and further education

part III|91 pages

APEL in the future: a two-way street to opportunity

chapter 9|3 pages

Introduction

chapter 10|21 pages

Some tensions

chapter 11|19 pages

Post-industrial learning

chapter 12|35 pages

Access: a two-way street

chapter 13|8 pages

Restructuring, reorganising, redeploying

chapter 14|3 pages

Endpiece