2nd Euroconference 'Lifelong Learning in Europe':
Differences versus Divisions.
Towards Strategies for Social Integration and Individual Learning Biographies.
13th - 17th of may 1998, Lisbon, Portugal
The conference results have been published
as:
Walther, Andreas/Stauber, Barbara (eds.): Lifelong Learning
in Europe. Volume II: Differences and Divisions. Strategies of
Social Integration and Individual Learning Biographies. Neuling:
Tübingen 1999. (see Abstracts of all contributions)
This conference was a follow-up to a European
Conference held in Dresden in November
1996 in the context of the European Year for Lifelong Learning. The
main issue of the first conference was to identify general
implications and theoretical presumptions connected to the concept
of ,lifelong learning'. Actually rather contradictory policies and
strategies are legitimized by 'lifelong
learning'. Therefore a number of key issues were identified: an
increased relevance of biography, subjectivity, flexibility and new
responsibility between individuals, market, state and intermediate
or non-profit organisations. As a result of the discussions it was
felt that two important issues had been overlooked previously:
firstly, a lack of differentiation between individual access to
education and training and the way in which lifelong learning is
embeded in individual biography; secondly the extent to which
lifelong learning policies are stratified according to the above
and the way these are linked to educational attainment, labour
market position, gender, age and ethnic group.
In the second conference, we started from the basis of
these findings and tried to develop criteria for political and
educational policies which on the one hand take into account the
different starting positions of lifelong learning (gender,
age/generation, labour market positions, cultural
orientation/origin) and which on the other hand dismantle the
reproduction of social inequality which is implicit in the rather
positive notion of lifelong learning. Therefore, at the conference,
concrete European experiences have been presented in a critical
perspective. These experiences were European, national, regional or
local policies (as 'learning society', 'learning region', 'learning
city' etc.) or the more informal contexts of learning as a part of
everyday life. In the presentations as well as in the discussions
these concepts/policies were related to the general dimensions
developed during the first conference and examined against the
differences between individual biographies and the social divisions
of access to lifelong learning. Policies were also highlighted in
which lifelong learning is not simply reduced to an adaptation of
human resources to economic demands reproducing social inequality,
but considers learners as actors of social integration.
Organizers: Andreas Walther (EGRIS), José Machado Pais (Instituto de Ciencias Sociais, Universidade de Lisboa), Gebhard Stein (IRIS e.V.)
PROGRAMME
Wednesday, May 13th | |
Afternoon / evening | Arrival and dinner |
Thursday, May 14th | |
Morning |
Greetings and Introduction
Opening Lectures: The concept of Learning Society Discussion |
Afternoon | Excursion: Exploring lifelong learning reality in Lisbon |
Friday, May 15th | |
Morning |
Forum I:
Lifelong Learning in the context of different labour market positions and educational levels Introduction, Statements, Reports, Comment |
Afternoon |
Forum II:
Lifelong Learning in the context of gender-specific biographies and gender hierarchy Introduction, Statements, Reports, Comment |
Saturday, May 16th | |
Morning |
Forum III:
Lifelong Learning in the context of changing generation relationships and everyday culture Introduction, Statements, Reports, Comment Final Session End of the Conference/Lunch |
Two texts have been recommended to the participants as a common reference:
Text of Reference I:
extracts from the European Commission's White Paper: 'Teaching and
Learning. Towards the Learning Society', 1995. Internet-version.
"The basis of this White Paper is the concerns of
every European citizen, young or adult, who faces the problem of
adjusting to new conditions of finding a job and changes in the
nature of work. No social category, no profession, no trade is
spared this problem.
The internationalisation of trade, the global
context of technology and, above all, the arrival of the
information society, have boosted the possibilities of access to
information and knowledge for people, but at the same time have as
a consequence changed work organization and the skills learned.
This trend has increased uncertainty for all and for some has led
to intolerable situations of exclusion.
It is clear that the new opportunities offered to people require an effort from each one to adapt, particularly in assembling one's own qualifications on the basis of 'building blocks' of knowledge acquired at different times and in various situations. The society of the future will therefore be a learning society. In the light of this it is evident that education systems - which means primarily the teachers - and all of those involved in training have a central role to play. The social partners, in exercising their responsibilities, including through collective bargaining, have a particularly important role, as these developments will condition the working environment of the future.
Education and training will increasingly become the main vehicles for self-awareness, belonging, advancement and self-fulfilment. Education and training whether acquired in the formal education system, on the job or in a more informal way, is the key for everyone to controlling their future and their personal development.
Education and training remain one of the determining factors in equality of opportunity. Education systems have already played an essential role in the emancipation and the social and professional advancement of women. Education can and must contribute further to the crucial equality between men and women.
Immaterial investment and getting the best out of
our human resources will improve competitiveness, boost jobs and
safeguard social achievements. The individual's place in relation
to their fellow citizens will increasingly be determined by their
capacity to learn and master fundamental knowledge.
The position of everyone in relation to
their fellow citizens in the context of knowledge and
skills therefore will be decisive. This relative position
which could be called the "learning relationship"
will become an increasingly dominant feature in the structure of
our societies.
The ability to renew and innovate will depend on the links between the development of knowledge in research and its transmission through education and training. In all this, communication will be essential both for generating and disseminating ideas.
The future of the EU and its development will depend largely on its ability to manage the progress towards this new society. The objective is to make it into a just and progressive society based on its cultural wealth and diversity. There is a need to whet society's appetite for education and training throughout life. There needs to be permanent and broad access to a number of different forms of knowledge. In addition, the level of skill achieved by each and everyone will have to be converted into an instrument for measuring individual performance in a way which will safeguard equal rights for workers as far as possible.
There is no single pattern for all to
follow throughout their working lives. Everyone must be able to
seize their opportunities for improvement in society and for
personal fulfilment, irrespective of their social origin and
educational background. This particularly applies to the
most disadvantaged groups who lack the family and social
environment to enable them to make the most of the general
education provided by school. These groups should be given the
chance not just to catch up, but to gain access to new knowledge
which could help to bring out their abilities.
....
To examine education and training in the
context of employment does not mean reducing them simply to a means
of obtaining qualifications. The essential aim of education and
training has always been personal development and the successful
integration of Europeans into society through the sharing of common
values, the passing on of cultural heritage and the teaching of
self-reliance.
However, this essential function of social
integration is today under threat unless it is accompanied by the
prospect of employment. The devastating personal and social effects
of unemployment are uppermost in the minds of every family, every
young person in initial training and everyone on the labour market.
The best way for education to continue to exercise this essential
function is to seek to provide a convincing response to alleviate
these concerns. The very foundations of any European society
purporting to teach its children the principles of citizenship
would be undermined if this teaching were to fail to provide for
job prospects.
(from the Introduction, pp. 1-4 of the
Internet-version)
....
Three major, profound and wide-ranging
factors of upheaval have emerged, however, which have
transformed the context of economic activity and the way our
societies function in a radical and lasting manner, namely: the
onset of the information society; the impact of the scientific and
technological world; and the internationalisation of the economy.
These events are contributing towards the development of the
learning society. They bring risks, but also opportunities which
must be seized.
The construction of this society will depend on
the ability to respond in two important ways to
the implications of these events. The first response focuses on the
need for a broad knowledge base and the second is
designed to build up abilities for employment and economic
life."
(from part I, 'Challenges ...', p.5 of the
Internet-version)
Text of Reference II: Lifelong Learning between vision and
division.
(Extracted from the editorial to Walther/Stauber 1998)
The discussion about lifelong learning nowadays is characterized by
an unsatisfactory vagueness: the notion is scintillating and is
used to define educational visions which are feared or longed for
depending on the individual employment situation, on respective
employment and education policies and on the perspective of
different actors in the educational field. The other side of this
vagueness, however, is a normative surplus transported by the
discussion on lifelong learning. There is an emancipatory
perspective of lifelong learning tending to break with the reduced
concept of learning within institutionalized educational
systems.
In order to develop this potential education and training have to start from the learners' perspective. This means on the one hand to consider the diversification/pluralisation of individual learning biographies. On the other side learners have to be considered as subjective actors of lifelong learning regarding both the planning and the shaping of learning processes. The following dimensions therefore are central for the acceptance and effectiveness of lifelong learning strategies:
- subjectivity, that is self-initiated and self-organised learning starting from the individual learning biography;
- holism/entirety in the sense of a combination of formal and informal learning in different areas of life instead of mere reactive learning according to labour market demands;
- gender relationships balanced out beyond the male model of the 'normal (labour) biography'; this has a double effect: recognizing ,reproductive' learning mostly of women on the one side, learning to re-concile different tasks which is crucial for modern learning biographies on the other side;
- the securing and qualifying of transitions and the recognition of their biographical autonomy; transitions become increasingly constitutive for life courses not only between youth and adulthood but also within adulthood itself and between adulthood and old age.
The concept of lifelong learning still seems to be open, opportunities of influence and the shaping of this educational vision still seem to exist. This is the optimistic version of dealing with this challenge going to local, regional, national and European (employment, social, education and training) policies but also to any politically motivated social and educational science. At the same time, there is a pessimistic version seeing in the openness and normativity of this concept just a token gesture of social integration reproducing social inequality.
Lifelong learning has been and still is discussed in the rhetorical
context of the democratization of the education system and/or the
prevention of social exclusion. A wide-spread presumption is that
normally people with low educational achievements are mostly
affected by social exclusion. As a consequence education is
considered as an effective protection. Against this, based on
empirical observations, the objection can be raised that lifelong
learning itself is a concept that reproduces social inequality and
social exclusion. Firstly, there are different opportunities of
access to lifelong learning, secondly, there are different measures
for different target groups and thirdly, lifelong learning stands
for the individualisation of social inequality.
With regard to the access to lifelong learning, it must be stated that the socio-structural barriers of age, gender and ethnic origin are reflected as they depend on individual educational attainments and/or labour market positions.
Besides, an overview over the measures offered under the label 'lifelong learning' reveals a stratification of their utility value according to different target groups and access structures. Three different (ideal) types of measures can be identified:
- Offensive concepts for 'cultural trendsetters' and those with high educational attainment or in high labour market positions: In such measures learners often are involved as subjects as they acquire competences in an expansive manner which give them the possibility to influence their environment or to become actors of structural change. However, only a minority profits from such opportunities.
- Defensive measures for those with an average education and middle labour market positions who are increasingly exposed to mechanisms of competition (the 'falling' middle class): Their positions are changing fast, they become flexibilised or are rationalised. This 'just more or less integrated' majority is expected more and more to adapt in order to maintain their status.
- Marginalising measures for those who find themselves already in processes of social decline or - in the case of young men and women with little cultural and social capital - who fail in coping with the status passage from school to work: Unproductive 'holding patterns' - in the sense that they do not provide concrete employment and biographical perspectives - have functions of 'cooling out' and direct the 'losers' of competition towards lower professional and biographical aspirations. Such schemes often have a 'container' structure as they keep the addressees at a distance from both the labour market and from other mechanisms of social integration.
It is not difficult to construct arguments which make these existing structures of segmentation - even more with reference to subjective lifelong learning strategies - look like results of individual success or failure: if in the official discourse, subjective further training behaviour is considered an increasingly important factor of success and failure in individual employment integration, the real structural side of unequal labour market opportunities disappears into the background - also where the field of socio-political responsibility is concerned: Labour market risks are individualised - the individuals as "planning agencies" of their biographies (Beck).
The demand individuals are confronted with is to demonstrate their
willingness and capacities for learning according to institutional
and business criteria. Thus, lifelong learning stands for the
ambivalence of flexibilisation and de-regulation. On the one hand,
qualifications are de-standardised, access to employment or
education and training could be opened. On the other hand,
competition passes market pressures directly to the individuals in
their respective biographical situation.
The conditions for integrative lifelong learning strategies have to
be socially arranged. Considering the bad situation of public
finances, the welfare state has become increasingly unpopular in
the political discourses. This however does not legitimise the lack
of conceptual imagination in the areas in between state and market.
The reality of further education and training shows an unbalanced
relation in this regard: On the one side, too much market
orientation underlines the pressure to adaptation, leaving no
scopes for the individuals for a subjective identification of the
'right' educational demands and for their integration into the
context of their lives. On the other side, a lack of market
orientation may have the effect that the practical value of
education and training for the addressees is either not tested, or
participation is expected despite the knowledge that employment
perspectives are low. This points to a de-coupling of work and
further education and training, as the former should no longer be
seen as the ultima ratio of the latter. From these normative
implications of the concept of 'lifelong learning', important
criteria for a new discussion on the relationship between learning
society and welfare state may be derived.
The right to learn is connected to conditions which can be
named concretely, which have to be politically decided and
legally codified: it has to be materially granted
- key-words might be 'basic income' or 'education and training
income' - as well as concerning time i.e. by regulations
of time off work, opportunities of re-training, compatibility with
child care or care of elder persons, and concerning space
in the sense that decentralized facilities are accessible in the
direct context of everyday life.
To the extent to which access to lifelong learning is determined by the individual labour market position, the concept of lifelong learning is also to be understood as a challenge for the shaping of labour markets. There is the opportunity to develop new models of acquistion, securing and recognition of competences and skills instead of the existing hierarchy of 'first' and 'second' labour markets being maintained by individualizing 'scheme policies'.
Another level for a welfare state which not only secures but
facilitates a 'learning society' is implied by the notion of
participation, which mostly is reduced to the access to
measures of education and training. Recurring to the aspects of
subjectivity and holism/entirety, the idea of participation has to
be extended to the identification of education and training needs,
contents and forms in the context of the individual biography.
Learners often know very well what is worth learning, which
education and training contents open further employment
perspectives and simultaneously make sense in the world of
everyday life. In the end, they are the ones personally responsible
for the effects of education and training, whether they decide for
themselves on the contents or whether they arise from
non-transparent planning and market processes.
The previous passages have presumably shown that lifelong learning requires many more political conditions than just increasing funds for further training or flexibilising respective regulations. Thus, it goes beyond the national cultural and institutional borders of educational systems. Regarding institutional convergence as well as cultural perspectives of understanding, the European level might be a realistic framework for the creation of instruments to meet these challenges.