National Adult Literacy Center Established at Harvard Graduate School
of Education
The Harvard Graduate School of Education (HGSE) has been awarded a new
$12.5 million federal grant to establish a national research and development
center for improving adult learning and literacy. The grant will support
the creation of the National Adult Literacy Center at HGSE, a collaborative
effort between HGSE and World Education, a non-profit economic and social
development organization with expertise in programs for adult literacy.
"Adults with limited literacy skills pay harsh penalties as citizens,
parents, and workers," said HGSE Dean Jerome T. Murphy. "A
lack of basic skills can keep people from even entry-level employment.
By bringing together an ambitious program of scholarship with a focused,
practical action agenda, the Adult Literacy Center will offer immediate
assistance to educational programs that serve adults. We are delighted
to be part of the solution to one of the nation's most urgent problems."
Recent studies, including the 1993 National Adult Literacy Survey (NALS),
have underscored the urgent need to improve adult literacy in the United
States. The NALS found that 21 percent of adult Americans, approximately
40 million people, have extremely limited reading, writing, and computational
skills, and another 27 percent, almost 50 million people, have marginal
skills and may have difficulty for example, understanding a simple appliance
warranty.
"Most U.S. adults could benefit from more education. Some need
to improve literacy skills or study for a high school diploma. Others
need to learn how to use a computer or acquire new job skills,"
said John Comings, an international expert in adult education who will
head the new center. "This new center will conduct research and
examine successful programs in order to improve all adult learning and
literacy efforts."
The new center will be a collaborative effort between HGSE and World
Education. Based in Boston, World Education has programs serving educationally
disadvantaged people in Asia, Africa, and the United States. With funding
from the Massachusetts Department of Education, World Education provides
technical assistance to all adult literacy, English as a second language,
and GED programs in the Commonwealth.
"World Education has been helping adult education programs improve
their services for more than 45 years," said Joel Lamstein, President
of World Education. "Our involvement ensures that the voice of practitioners
and adult learners will be heard and that the center's research
will have a direct and immediate impact on teaching and learning."
The center will convene a national leadership group composed of adult
learners, practitioners, administrators, scholars, and policy makers to
build its agenda. Using a consensus process and working collaboratively
with a larger group via an electronic network, the leadership group will
build the center's research agenda. The center will disseminate
its work through electronic and paper newsletters and research bulletins.
The center plans to establish at least three collaborations with institutions
in other regions of the country. Its first collaboration is with the Center
for Literacy Studies at the University of Tennessee; other regional partners
will be located in the West and Mid-West.
Research Agenda
The crux of the center's work will be researching critical questions
about the effective teaching of adult literacy skills. The researchers
have identified four broad areas for their inquiries and created specific
projects within each area for the first phase of research. Areas of inquiry
were selected because of their potential to improve the methods of teaching
adult literacy skills. As the work progresses, the center expects to add
to this initial list.
- Motivation of Adult Learners
HGSE professors John Willett and Richard Murnane will examine the motivations
of adult learners in GED (General Educational Development) programs.
Robert Kegan, Lecturer at HGSE, will examine factors in adult development.
Center director John Comings will lead a multi-phase study of why adults
persist in a learning program.
- Classroom Practice
Using the NALS data, John Strucker, a 1995 HGSE graduate, will test
theoretical propositions about adult reading difficulties. HGSE Project
Zero Research Associate Julie Viens and Silja Kallenbach, Coordinator
of the New England Literacy Resource Center at World Education, will
examine the relevance of Multiple Intelligences theory to adult learning
and literacy.
- Staff Development
Christine Smith, Senior Program Officer at World Education will investigate
which approaches to staff development have the greatest impact on educators.
Additional work will review current and best practices in professional
development throughout the country.
- Assessment of Outcomes
Juliet Merrifield, Director of the Center for Literacy Studies at the
University of Tennessee and Professor Hal Beder of Rutgers University
will collaborate on an assessment study to help build an overall framework
for defining goals and objectives. Center director John Comings will
oversee a longitudinal study on adult learner behavior and change that
will examine learner motivation, classroom practices, and the effect
that adult basic education has on learner's lives. HGSE Associate
Professor Victoria Purcell-Gates will examine how adults acquire everyday
literacy skills outside the classroom. Rima Rudd, Lecturer on Health
Education at the Harvard School of Public Health, will study the links
between health and literacy.
The Adult Literacy Center is one of seven national centers supported
by the U.S. Department of Education's Office of Education Research
and Improvement. HGSE is also a collaborator in the national center dedicated
to increasing the effectiveness of state and local education reform efforts.
The six other centers address young children's development and learning,
student learning and achievement, student assessment and educational accountability,
the needs of a diverse student population, and improving post secondary
education.
For More Information
Contact Ariadne Valsamis at 617-496-1895