This research presents an analysis of the life stories of four adult literacy
learners studying on a Skills for Life course in a Further Education context in the
south west of England, three of whom are returning to education for the first
time in their adult lives. Drawing on data generated by semi-structured
biographical interviews, a socio-cultural lens is used to gain detailed insights into
participants’ life histories and their understandings of the nuanced ways the
adult literacy course may be helping them in their lives in the education context
and beyond.
Findings from the analysis of the participants' life stories clearly show that their
personal narratives are shaped by a heterogeneous bricolage of broader
discourses available to them in different social contexts. Although the themes
of employability and skills, synonymous with neoliberal political discourses of
adult education are dominant themes in the participants’ life stories, a rich
variety of other narrative themes such motherhood, mental health, dyslexia,
marginalisation, social alienation, criminality and substance abuse are also
integral to the narratives and the significance of their learning experiences. It is
argued that the outcomes of adult literacy learning are by no means reducible to
skills acquisition and increases in employability, and that literacy learning
experiences can engender a nuanced range of significant, albeit less tangible,
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transitions in people's lives that practitioners and policy makers should take in
to consideration in devising literacy strategies that meet the needs of people
accessing course provision.
The representations of the narratives within the analysis show the ways the
participants’ course learning experiences, coupled with their exposure to
'alternative' social and education discourses are gradually engendering changes
in their literacy practices, their learner identities and world views. Unlike other
similar sociocultural research about the outcomes of formal adult literacy
education, which so often uses a narrow focus on learners' experiences of the
course context using statistical data, the biographical-interpretative approach
used in this research situates their learning experiences in broader context of
the participants’ life stories. In doing this, the research better illustrates the
significance of their learning literacy experiences and the ways literacy learning
is helping the participants in their lives within the field of education as well as in
other social contexts.
The findings strongly indicate that the participants’ literacy learning experiences
are having a significant destabilising effect on the ways they conceptualise their
learning histories, their learning identities and imagined futures. By aligning
with the lifelong learning discourses, the participants‘ emerging identities as
lifelong adult learners are manifesting in them critically evaluating and resisting
the ways they have previously been disadvantaged in education contexts and
imagining new possibilities in education. The research shows that such
meaning making processes are a vitally important aspect of the learning
process that is integral disadvantaged adult learners realising their imagined
futures in the education and therefore is an implication which should be
acknowledged by policy makers and practitioners in the field.
Date of Award | 2019 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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Supervisor | Peter Kelly (Other Supervisor) |
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- Social Practice
- Discourse
- Identity
- Narrative
- Life Story
- Adult Literacy
"It is possible to reinvent yourself!” An analysis of the learning lives and lived experience of adult literacy students in a Further Education context
Grundy, C. (Author). 2019
Student thesis: PhD