Credit Where Credit is Due in Non-Credit Adult Education
Abstract
The author sings the praises of non-credit adult education, and enlists a number of philosophers to help in the chorus. He examines the motives people might have for enrolling in non-credit courses, and makes the following claims: that good non-credit adult education can give us a purpose, provide some order in our unpredictable lives, encourage us to reason freely, nurture our consciousness, foster a civil society, protect valuable elements of our lifeworld, and teach us to assert ourselves.
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Published
19-Jul-2013
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Articles
How to Cite
“Credit Where Credit is Due in Non-Credit Adult Education” (2013) Concept: The Journal of Contemporary Community Education Practice Theory, 4(2), p. 21. Available at: https://concept.lib.ed.ac.uk/Concept/article/view/2347 (Accessed: 13 July 2025).