Description
In refusing to deny its conjectural foundations, to mask its tenuous structure, or to defend its precarious integrity, the book assumes a form that distinguishes it markedly from its modernist counterparts. In favoring commentary over empirical evidence, a multiplicity of voices over a prescriptive narrative, the development of an ethical attitude toward practice over formulaic prescriptions for practice, and inter-over intra-disciplinary sources to substantiate its claims, this work calls into question a whole range of modernist predilections. By repeatedly breaching the narrowly prescribed parameters of adult education's orthodoxy and constantly promoting reflective inquiry, this book reveals how different, yet equally valid, forms of evidence can be drawn upon to develop an ethical postmodern perspective that calls the modern instrumental practice of adult education into question.
About the Author
Derek Briton is in the Department of Educational Policy Studies at the University of Alberta.
Reviews
"This book addresses very important issues in adult education. Not unlike the work of Apple, Giroux, and McLaren, Derek Briton poses in this text a normatively driven notion of what adult educators should do. Its major advantage-the one that gives it its most important 'edge'-is its postmodernist theme and tone. This contribution to adult education cannot be underestimated.
"One of the book's most important contributions is to further the growing critique of 'technicism' in adult education by explicating the historical roots of this critique. Thus the issues raised in this book are central to the political and ethical practice of adult education and to the preparation of adult educators."-Arthur L. Wilson, North Carolina State University
Book Information
ISBN 9780791430262
Author Derek Briton
Format Paperback
Page Count 176
Imprint State University of New York Press
Publisher State University of New York Press
Weight(grams) 281g
Dimensions(mm) 229mm * 152mm * 25mm