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  • How can we drive up essential skills participation? Looking at other countries’ strategies to illuminate best practice.

    Too many people in the UK do not have the essential skills they need to get on in life and the number of adults participating in learning has fallen over the last decades. We look at four countries - Australia, Germany, Norway and Switzerland - to help shed light on ways in which there may be scope to strengthen and develop adult basic skills policy in England, ultimately helping to drive up participation.
  • An end and a beginning: the European Agenda for Adult Learning and international cooperation

    This blog by Stephen Evans, the Chief Exec of Learning and Work Institute, looks at future cooperation between the UK and the EU.
  • The first point of contact

    No matter how old we get, the role of teacher is perceived as one of authority. Authority can of course symbolise oppression, a dangerous imbalance of status, or the powerful versus the powerless. But authority isn’t necessarily a bad thing. It can also represent integrity, safety, expertise.
  • What's in a name?

    Our report explains how increasingly adult learning professionals work in multi-agency settings where roles can be ‘blurred’, and collaborative approaches are used. Such approaches demand leaders and practitioners to work in innovative ways.
  • Research and Reports 01 03 2019

    Evaluation of ESF In-Work Progression Programme

    Findings from the evaluation of the European Social Fund (ESF) In-Work Progression Programme, which aimed to support low paid workers to progress into better paid work.
    Read more Download
  • Research and Reports 18 12 2017

    European Agenda for Adult Learning (2015-2017)

    In the period 2015-17, we aimed to enable greater policy coherence through sharing existing research, looking for regional and local case studies, and disseminating them.
    Read more Download

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