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Vol. 6 No. 3

Universities as Institutions of Lifelong Learning: Epistemological Dilemmas

Submitted
August 11, 2010
Published
2010-08-11

Abstract

Both adult education and universities are being forced to change to respond to globalization and the pressures of knowledge societies. This is proving difficult for some universities that have traditionally taught discipline-based knowledge and whose main student body has been young adults. Now the demands for continuing education for adults are coming from a knowledgebased workforce. Universities are being forced to become institutions of lifelong learning with a greater proportion of adult students than young adult undergraduates. These social conditions are generating epistemological problems, including the nature of accepted and legitimated knowledge, which is also changing the way universities teach and assess knowledge. Two major epistemological dilemmas are explored here—and some “solutions” are offered:
• Following the work of Scheler, local and universal (modern) knowledge is examined
• Knowledge is becoming more practical and the relationship between theory and practice redefined. Universities have traditionally taught theory but now they are faced with the demand for practical knowledge.
Consequently, it will be shown here that one of the new paradigms for adult education for the twenty-first century must also be one of the new paradigms for higher education.