Abstract

This study provides an accessible account of the policy making process of the European Union in the arena of adult skills and competence development. In particular, the way skill standards for adult learners is designed in the EU official statements is investigated, analyzing the developments in the European Union’s adult education policies since the Lisbon process was launched in order to verify to what extent they are evidence-based and legitimated through scientific research and specific ex-ante studies. In fact, because of the ageing work force in Europe, but also in the light of the recent economic downturns and the increased labor market’s flexibility and dynamics, many governments have tried to foster the involvement and participation of adults in lifelong learning paths for them to suit the transformations of the knowledge-based societies and be active and competitive even in older ages. This empirical paper is based on literature review and content analysis of the relevant policy documents and official EU statements. The main findings show how, beyond declared purposes and political slogans, the way the EU is shaping the adult learners’ upskilling significantly appears to aim at the substantial bolstering of basic and digital skills in order to cope with the knowledge economy rather than giving emphasis to more comprehensive sets of competences for lifelong learning and active ageing, which are going to be needed more than ever in the years to come.

Highlights

  • At the beginning of the seventies, in a lucid popular booklet, Nobel prize Lorenz (1973) qualified the disproportionate growth of the human species as one of the eight “civilized man’s deadly sins”

  • The question I am discussing in the paragraph tries to find out, by means of content analysis and through critical review of the relevant literature, whether and to what extent the EU is shaping the adult learners’ upskilling giving more emphasis to basic/hard skills in order to train people to cope with the global economy rather than taking into account core/soft skills for its citizens in the scope of binding economic cohesion with social cohesion, one pillar of the EU political mainstreaming together with employment and economic growth (Adnett, 2001), as exemplified by Title XIV of the Maastricht Treaty

  • The skill development for adult learners in the EU education policies is meant to be influenced by the 2006 statement on the Key Competencies for lifelong learning as a red thread linking the general/compulsory education with the second chance and continuing education and training

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Summary

Introduction

At the beginning of the seventies, in a lucid popular booklet, Nobel prize Lorenz (1973) qualified the disproportionate growth of the human species as one of the eight “civilized man’s deadly sins”.

Results
Conclusion

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