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Education Goals

Introduction / Goal One / Goal Two / Goal Three / Goal Four / Goal Five / Goal Six


Goal Five: Adult Literacy and Lifelong Learning

By the Year 2000, every adult American will be literate and will possess the knowledge and skills necessary to compete in a global economy and exercise the rights and responsibilities of citizenship.

A community that embraces intergenerational education will by its nature be one where adult literacy and lifelong learning are revered. Programs that encourage youth to teach older adults can play a key role in creating such a community. Libraries are essential components and can serve as sites for meetings and programming. Community-wide commitment is also important. A community that dedicates itself to learning sends a message to all who live in it: that whatever one's age, reading and learning should be daily activities.

"Working together to support and improve education for all children, we supply connecting links between all generations." Joan Cosgrove, President Illinois PTA

"Today's complicated an demanding lifestyles have created a society in need of more cooperative co-existence among generations. Through involvement in intergenerational programs in both the public and private sectors, people young and old can thrive. George H. Ryan Secretary of State


1. Adult Learning: Literacy, Skills Training Vital to Nation's Future

By Marcia Escott, Illinois State University

Scenario 1: A junior high classroom

Rowdy adolescents, three to five years behind grade level in reading, work side by side with older adults, maybe retired teachers, but more often simply older citizens wanting to contribute. The older adults are helping the youngsters improve their reading skills.

Scenario 2: The cafeteria of a local business or industry

Workers who are about to be displaced because they lack basic skills necessary to keep up with technological change work alongside students from the local high school. The students are helping the workers with math and reading.

The learning in most intergenerational programs goes both ways. Whether the youth are teaching adults, or vice versa, we all benefit. We have better educated youngsters with stronger self-esteem. We gain a better educated workforce that can remain competitive. And we have happier, more involved senior citizens who stay in touch with younger generations.

Learning is essential throughout the life cycle. It does not take place at a given stage in the human development process. Rather, it is an ongoing condition of existence, inseparable from our roles as citizens.

Yet illiteracy threatens our society. Estimates of adult illiteracy range from 17 million to more than 60 million. Some cannot read or understand written language at all, but more often the problem is less severe. Many people have only a fourth to eighth grade skill level; some have learning disabilities; some need to upgrade skills to meet more demanding workplace requirements; some have the skills but they are rusty because they are so rarely used.

What does this mean for our work force? The workplace is changing. Jobs that require more education, especially in the service sector, are projected to make up 90 percent of new jobs through the year 2000. Only 27 percent of new jobs will fall into low-skill categories, compared to 40 percent of jobs today. The Bureau of Labor Statistics predicts that more than half of all new jobs created between 1984 and 2000 will require some education beyond high school, and almost a third will require a college education.

Needed: Skilled people to fill demanding jobs

Further, the decline in population growth will mean an older work force, with the average age of workers increasing from 36 to 39 by the year 2000. Between now and 2000, more than half of all new workers will be minorities, nearly three times the current figure, and women are expected to contribute 64 percent of the total growth in the labor force. An additional 20 percent will be nonwhite or immigrant men.

A new study produced by the Departments of Labor, Commerce, and Education indicates that American workers are not keeping pace with the demands of today's jobs -- and the gap is widening. More workers are entering the job market with serious educational deficiencies; many will never catch up. Our economy, stability, and power as a country are threatened.

Each of us can make a difference by working to help more adults become readers. This goal has its well-known advocates: First Lady Barbara Bush has made literacy her pet project, and Illinois Governor Jim Edgar has made it a priority. While less well-known, the youth and adults who take part in intergenerational programs can play a critical role in raising the nation's literacy rate.
For more information, contact Marcia Escott, Ph.D., Director of Adult Learning and the BroMenn/ISU Center for the Study of Aging, Illinois State University, Normal, Illinois, 61761, (309) 438-8691.


"The intergenerational way of life should serve as an example for all of society, showing us how people of different generations can live in harmony, sharing resources and nurturing each other. In these tight fiscal times, intergenerational and interagency cooperation is imperative in order to help frail and vulnerable people of all ages." Victor L. Wirth, former Director Illinois Department on Aging

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2. Senior Studies: College Courses Where Young, Old Interact
By June Heinrich, Triton College

The Senior Studies Program at Triton College offers a variety of courses designed mainly for those 60 and older, but open to all ages. The program is viewed not as a place of age segregation but as a bridge to opportunities for students of all ages. Intergenerational learning is encouraged by offering courses likely to appeal to both younger and older students, and then promoting them without age labeling.

The innovative Lifelong Learning Program in liberal arts offers special credit, a certificate, and a Lifelong Learner key pin to attract senior citizens to more challenging learning experiences and to regular credit courses. Among the Lifelong Learner Program courses that have been the most successful in bringing together younger and older students are World Religions, Beginning Piano, and Floral Design. Younger and older students strongly approved of the mixed-age classes. In an evaluation of the World Religions course, an older student wrote, "All classes should be intergenerational. Both generations profit." A younger student commented, "I think the intergenerational experience is invaluable . . . we all give to each other."

Older people have much to learn from their juniors, and as one participant wrote: "Younger people can learn from older people who have lived through the history that young people can only read about or see and hear in audiovisual experiences. People of all ages--as well as of both sexes and of many racial and ethnic backgrounds--need to think and talk together, not only about the past but about the future."
For more information, contact Dr. June Heinrich, Program Director, Senior Studies Program, Triton Community College, River Grove, Illinois, 60171, (708) 456-0300, Ext. 599.


"Intergenerational activities and programs give us the tools to promote meaningful experiences shared by the generations." Janet S. Otwell, Regional Director American Association of Retired Persons

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3. Building Literacy: To Succeed, All Must Become Involved
By Elio DeArrudah, Chicago Public Library Literacy Program

Illiteracy is no longer the problem of only a few people or of a small minority. The problem belongs to all of us because we live in an increasingly interdependent society. The sooner we all start thinking about a solution, the better it will be for all. The sooner we introduce ourselves to this challenge, the more chances we will have to get somewhere with our literacy efforts. Given the interdependent, the intergenerational, and the interracial dimensions of illiteracy, it is only reasonable that we start thinking of a multigenerational, multicultural, multiethnic, and multidimensional dialogue in which all parties must participate.

Adult non-readers are not empty headed; they do have something relevant to say, even though they cannot read. Literacy students are prospective partners in the lifelong learning endeavor. We expect our adult literacy learners to be providers, as well as recipients; active, rather than passive; exchangers of dialogue rather than "mummy-like" features in our literacy centers; writers, as well as readers; and knowledge producers in addition to knowledge consumers.

Essentially, we want them to share -- by speaking about and writing down their issues, aspirations, concerns, hopes, sufferings, visions, dreams, pains, and whatever else they deem worthwhile.

Reading is the first step to writing, and public readings are a way to spread excitement about literacy. Last spring, the Guild Complex in Chicago invited us to share our voices with its associates, friends, and supporters. In a series of public readings in Lincoln Park, our "community poets and writers" presented their literary creations for the first time outside their neighborhoods. The following are a few examples of the work coming from the Literacy Program.

"Linking the resources and the potential of older persons and youth is key if we are to make any meaningful progress in improving education and social services in our communities across the state. Vincent Lane, Chairman Chicago Housing Authority


Reaching to the Sky
By Sanda Hinton Henry Horner Homes
There is a big world out there.
And there is no such thing
That I cannot do
Do not let anyone
Tell you
What you can or cannot do.

The sky is the limit . . .
If you keep on
At something
You are bound
To get it
So, get it!!!!


We the People
By Faye Clark* Henry Horner Homes Literacy Initiative
We the people must
Come together as one.

We the people must
Unite and come together
All the time for all.

We the people must
Establish ourselves as
Sisterhood and Brotherhood.

We the people should
Love each other as one.

We the people must
Come together to be together
To be stronger
And closer to the absolute power.

We the people must
Help each other to get along
So that this world of ours will be
A much better place for you, me, and
Everybody else to live.


Thinking of you
By Timothy Roberts Henry Horner Homes
I think of you both day and night
Remembering you in my prayers
So I know you both are alright
For they show a love
So very surprising
For it's never
Fake or disguising

When I'm away for so very long
They can even keep in touch
By telling me what's been going on
For the love I show
Can never be torn
For I've been with them
Since the first day
They were born

For the love they've shown Dad
Is so very willing
Yet I thank the almighty God
For my two beautiful, wonderful children

* Faye Clark started in the Henry Horner Homes Literacy Initiative as a student. Soon, she was bringing along her children and engaging them in the learning exchange. She went on to become a peer tutor and also a member of the Henry Horner Homes Literacy Initiative Council a year later.

For more information, contact Elio DeArrudah, Chicago Public Library, 400 S. State St., Suite 95-11A, Chicago, Illinois, (312) 747-4162.

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4. A Lifelong Learning Community: One Village's Commitment
By Len Sirotzki, Bensenville

Educational reform efforts over past decades have generally proven to be less satisfying than reformers had hoped. Innovations have come and gone, frequently consuming considerable resources and energies. The more we tried to change, the more we seemed to remain the same.

Efforts have been unsuccessful in part because many view the school as if it existed in some kind of vacuum rather than within a community. Schools do not lead society, they reflect it. Any community that fails to regenerate its value system will harbor a school system with no place to go.

Learning cannot be equated with schooling. Learning begins at birth and continues through life. A school experience typically lasts for just 13 years, and while those years are important, every student who begins kindergarten has already experienced considerable learning, and every graduate will continue learning for throughout the life span.

For these reasons, In February, 1991, the Bensenville Intergovernmental Group (BIG) unanimously adopted the resolution, "Bensenville: A Lifelong Learning Community." The resolution invited every individual and every group within the community to enjoin one grand vision which emphasizes the value of learning.

The members of BIG committed themselves to a series of Saturday morning skill-enhancing seminars. Besides listing their individual and group learning needs, they have begun to design marketing strategies for an initial set of action items. The leaders have publicly agreed to set aside personal agendas in order to reach for learning-related, common goals to strengthen families, improve the outcomes of schooling, reestablish the efficacy of teachers, develop partnerships among family, education, business, labor, and government, and renew the sense of community.
For more information, contact Dr. Len Sirotzki, Director, DuPage-Kane ESC, 421 N. County Farm Road, Wheaton, IL 60187, 708-682-6955.

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Retiree Mentors: Sharing a Passion for Learning
by Mary Simon and Vivian Snyder, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale

"We walked into the room and the students looked at us in amazement. 'What are all these older people doing in our class?' "The freshmen students soon discovered they were in for an interesting semester of nontraditional activities embracing basic skills. When the students talked about time effectiveness, the mentors helped them plot their activities noting that study should have a place in each daily plan. The students and retirees conducted mutual interviews sharing their experiences of growing up, dating, and their perceptions of world and local issues. When the semester was completed, the students made comments about their mentors: "They have worked at this campus and understand all the problems you now face." "It (the program) gave me a sense of support; my mentor, was very helpful--I enjoyed it a lot!"

The retiree mentoring program is a part of University 100, a non-credit course which meets two hours each week. In the first hours, the instructor focuses on the presentation and discussion of a basic skill; in the second, retired faculty mentors lead a laboratory session that provides time for students to practice and review the material prior to a weekly quiz. Mentor-student interaction was predominantly in a group setting, although one-on-one mentoring was built into the plan. The students and mentors seemed to prefer the group setting and the opportunity to develop support systems among their peers. The mentors often acted as catalysts to link students to information about housing, jobs, and ways to enhance their learning experience.
For further information, contact Vivan Snyder, Center for Basic Skills, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, Carbondale, IL 62901, 618-536-6646.

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