Adult Education Policy in 1960s America:Ideological Rifts Amongst Increased Funding
Stephanie Coleman's paper and Oscar Guajardo's paper.
Natalie Guest
Ball State University
EDAC631
Abstract
This
paper explores the increased federal funding of adult education in the 1960s in
relationship to the sociocultural and economic backdrop of the time period. The
research used comes from three published scholarly articles as well as on
federal government report. This paper examines Bannon, Kulich, and Martin’s
work in relation to the historical and factual background of the report. This
paper attempts to reconcile the friction between contemporaries of adult education
in the 1960s and the federal policies of the time with an emphasis on informing
the future of the adult education field.
History is imperative in providing
the ideas and insights that will shape the context and perspective for a chosen
field of study. One must learn the history of a content area to fully engage in
the future formation of said field. To know where we are headed, we must know
where we have been. Practitioners of any field of study shape the dialogue,
perspectives, and policies during the time period which they are contributing.
Just as practitioners have shaped the field of adult education, so to have
historians of adult education shaped the constructs held by society with the
interpretive influences of their ideas. The history of ideas in adult education
can broadly be categorized into two areas: professional traditions and social
reforms. Neutrality in historical interpretation is nearly impossible,
therefore historian's interpretations shape our understanding of the field of
adult education and eventually our views in practice. Looking back, adult
education in America has historically been led by efforts that involved
indoctrination, stressed conformity, and discouraged diversity. America during
the 1960s saw an unprecedented push for federal funding of adult education
programs in response to the social changes and upheaval of the time, but in
larger part due to the economic growth opportunity of a more well-educated
populace.
The Civil Rights Movement of the
1960s was the main social backdrop of the era. Persistent social change and
upheaval of the day helped lead to the human potential movement (Kulich, 1992).
Martin Luther King Jr. and fellow activists lead the March on Washington, the
Selma to Montgomery Marches, and the Birmingham Children's Crusade. People of
color were fighting for basic human rights, and their plight for equality was
often at odds with political leadership and legislation being passed. From Jim
Crow to voter suppression to segregation, the oppression of people of color and
minorities was still in full swing even one hundred years post abolition. With
the advent of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, American citizens no longer had to
accept the practices of institutionalized racism and discrimination, yet they
were left with the harsh realities of a post slavery and post share cropping
America. What would be the economic impact on America if people of color, many descendants
of slaves, could now join the workforce more freely, yet lacked the education
to do so? What resulted was an entire segment of the population who
theoretically had equal access to jobs, education, and housing, without having
had equal access to educational opportunities in the past.
Two of the main players in the field
of adult education during the 1960s, Paulo Friere and Ivan Illich, used the
method of inquiry aligned with Marxist social analysis which “attempts to
assess the fundamental organizational structure of societies based on
capitalistic principles” (Martin, 2003, p.408)
As Marx did, Friere and Illich saw the value in analyzing the societal
structure of the country as a means of questioning the status quo to hopefully
lead to a revolutionary shift in the power balance of human capital. Main
concepts popularized in adult education amongst practitioners during the 1960s
include Marxism and the human potential movement. One tenet of Marxism of
particular relevance to the adult education movements of the 1960s was that
“The class having the means of material production also has control over the
means of intellectual production, so that ... the ruling ideas are nothing more
than the ideal expression of the dominant [social class]” (Martin, 2003, p.409). The human capital
perspective was the more dominant notion among those crafting policies related
to adult education. For example, the dominant idea of literacy of the 1960s
lawmakers limits the idea of literacy to basic skills. As Bannon asserts in EMERGING VOICES: Capitalizing on Adult Education: The
Economic Imperative for Literacy in 1960s Federal Policy Discourse:
Human capital theory has reinforced
definitions of literacy as limited to basic skills, including reading, writing,
and computation. By extension, literacy learners have been figured as atomized
individuals, only connected to specific contexts in ways that match up with
policy demands—for example, individuals acquire basic skills in order to gain
employment, retain employment, or pursue additional job training. (2016, p. 315)
The
adult education policies of the 1960s were shaped by the idea of literacy being
primarily remedial in nature. Subsequently, scholars and the federal lawmakers
were frequently at odds about the purpose of adult education. Bannon highlights
how language scholars formed a resistance to what she calls, “the growing
federal emphasis on education in service of economic advancement” (Bannon, 2016,
p. 317). Groups like Project English and the National Council of Teachers of
English sought to professionalize and legitimize the English language and
composition as scholarly subjects, but the fact remained they were up against
the economic demands of the cold war which called for a focus on mathematical
and scientific advancements. (Bannon, 2016, p.318) The push for federal adult
education policy resulted in three key pieces of legislation during this era:
Title II, Part B of the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964, the Adult Education
Act of 1966, and the Secondary Education Act Amendment of 1968. (U.S. Department of Education, 2013, p.6)
The distinct social changes of the
time period were of great import to adult education in the 1960s. Specifically
in America this emphasis was seen in the boost in federal funding to adult
education policies and programs. The mismatch of intentions of social crusaders
and needs of oppressed groups and those making the legislative decisions bled
into the adult education movement. Even with sweeping legislation targeted at
improving the educational opportunities of minorities, people of color, and the
impoverished, the focus never strayed far from policy purely for economic
benefit.
Across North America, as
practitioners set out to professionalize the field of adult education,
recognition of adult education as its own distinct category of study grew, and
along with it, federal funding (Kulich, 1992). Federal adult education policy
of the 1960s was primarily concerned with the following: statistics, literacy,
adult basic education, community development, education of the aging, and
education for public affairs (U.S. Department of
Education, 2013, p. 5). The enlarged federal role in adult education
during this era brought about new sources of funding, an overall new direction,
and additional program growth to the field (U.S.
Department of Education, 2013, p. 5).
The heightened national consciousness about the needs of improving
economic and educational opportunities and conditions for disadvantaged adults
can be seen as a catalyst for programs that focused primarily on adults with
less than a high school diploma. Federal funding was broken into three broad
program categories: education for government employees, both civilian and
military, manpower development and training programs, and programs to develop
literacy and basic skills (U.S. Department of
Education, 2013, p.8).
The pressing demands of The Cold
War, poverty and illiteracy rates, as well as social unrest were influential
factors in the development of adult education during the 1960s. Adult education
with a focus on government employees began with military training and increased
special skills. The GED, developed in 1942 and still widely in use at the time,
was not enough to ensure proficient literacy among the armed forces. The 1969
inception of a military adult education program called “Project 100,000” sought
to deliver basic literacy skills to troops. (U.S.
Department of Education, 2013, p.6). In 1969, America also saw policies
that encouraged the development of training programs to improve education and
technical skills of employees at the lowest level of service to achieve
advancement. Executive Order 11478 brought about Affirmative Action that
ensured equal opportunity in federal service for all. (U.S.
Department of Education, 2013, p.7)
Powerful economic and social forces
spurred legislative response to previously neglected training and educational
needs. In addition to basic literacy programs, the newly implemented
legislation of the 1960s brought about programs focused on helping those facing
immigration, unemployment, and underemployment. Adult education policies
focused on manpower brought about a renewed interest in occupational training,
public libraries, on-the-job training, and co-op extension programs. The
remaining effects of The Great Depression coupled with the Civil Rights
Movement created a powerful force in bringing about a renewed sense of
educational justice at a federal level. However, early adult education policies
such as the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964 were all designed to prevent
dependency. As stated in the EOA (1964), such policies should help individuals
to be “less likely to become dependent on others, improving their ability to
benefit from occupational training and otherwise increasing their op-
portunities for more productive and profitable employment, and making them
better able to meet their adult responsibilities” (Bannon, 2016, p. 318, p. 8).
At the time, an opportunity to gain basic education skills, which is what the
EOA (1964) offered, was of some benefit to obtaining and retaining gainful
employment.
Although it can be hard to pinpoint
exactly when basic skills adult education came into fruition, the shift in
focus of programs like Cooperative Extension Service Programs from agrarian and
rural to centered on urban and poor community development can be tied to the
policies of the 1960s. (U.S. Department of
Education, 2013, p.7) The
implications of education policy from the 1960s designed to prevent dependency,
focused on remediation, and directed towards head of household earners resulted
in a system that excluded many from programs based on age, ability, skill, and
location. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 and subsequent executive orders were of
little help when it came to gainful employment opportunities for people of
color, non-English speaking minorities, and the undereducated. In an attempt to
address the gap in education and employment left in the wake of previous
policies, congress sought to pass the Adult Basic Education Act of 1963, but it
was defeated. (U.S. Department of Education, 2013,
p.8) The perspective at the federal level in the 1960s when it comes to
adult education policy can be seen as leaving lasting implications in the field
of adult education in the way that the human capital perspective is still tied
to policy making today. The view of education policy for profit has larger
implications for universities, curriculum writers, and students alike and can
be seen today in legislation dealing with education issues from Common Core to
student loans to mass public school privatization.
Although marked by a great increase
in federal funding, adult education policy written on a government level in the
1960s was not reflective of the goals and hopes of practitioners of the time
period, and at worst, was at odds with what social activists had long fought to
achieve. In essence, the standard seems
to be set that education policy in America is shaped around economic growth and
not much else. This lingering focus of education solely for economic
advancement carries on to the policy writing of present day, yet overtime, the
focus of adult basic education has shifted to preparing adults for workplace
readiness. Although working for a living is a factor in one’s mental wellness
in self-actualization terms, education purely for profit is still a reflection
of the human capitalist perspective that was integrated into policy in America
during the 1960s. Ultimately despite the best of intentions, the push for
federal funding of adult education programs in the United States during the
1960s in response to sociocultural pressure and economic needs did not address
the gap in education and employment for many of America’s poorest citizens.
References
Bannon, J. L. (2016). EMERGING VOICES: Capitalizing on Adult
Education: The Economic
Imperative for
Literacy in 1960s Federal Policy Discourse. College
English, 78(4), 314-339.
Retrieved February 6, 2017, from http://sb6nw2tx4e.search.serialssolutions.com.proxy.bsu.edu/?genre=article&atitle=EMERGING%20VOICES%3A%20Capitalizing%20on%20Adult%20Education%3A%20The%20Economic%20Imperative%20for%20Literacy%20in%201960s%20Federal%20Policy%20Discourse.&title=College%20English&issn=00100994&isbn=&volume=78&issue=4&date=20160301&aulast=Bannon,%20Jessica%20L.&spage=314&pages=314-339&sid=EBSCO:Academic%20Search%20Premier:113756605
Kulich, J. (1992). Adult education through a rear view mirror:
The changing face of adult
education over the
last.. Convergence, 25(4), 42.
Martin, E. J. (2003). Critical Social Analysis, Service
Learning, and Urban Affairs: A Course
Application in Public
Policy and Administration* * This paper is in part derived from "The Role
of Critical Social Analysis in Public Policy and Administration: A Service
Learning Course Application in Race, Inequality, and Public Policy,"
Contemporary Justice Review 5:4 (2002), pp. 351-369, by Edward J. Martin. New Political Science, 25(3), 407-431.
doi:10.1080/07393140307185
U.S. Department of Education, Office of Vocational and Adult
Education, An American
Heritage—Federal Adult
Education: A Legislative History 1964-2013, Washington, DC, 2013.
Natalie, I really enjoyed reading the information regarding literacy amongst the African American community during the 1960s. This is an extension on the decade I researched (1860-1870). It is profound to imagine that at the end of the Civil War only 5% of slaves could read. Although much legislation was passed to try to expand opportunities and several HBC came out of that movement, 100 years later the Civil Rights movement was still battling over basic literacy. It was a nice extension for me to fast forward 100 years to see the work that was built on the period of time I researched.
ReplyDeleteHello Natalie,
ReplyDeleteGreat job on your history paper of adult education in the 1960s. I actually covered the same era so it was great to learn about the 1960s from a different perspective. Although I did find research about the hesitations for funding adult education I did not write about it so it was nice to read about it further and how you interpreted the information, I think the 60s were a time of many changes for American society with the fights for civil and labor rights. It was a time where adult education was necessary to understand and support the inequalities of its time.
Great interpretation and research.
Glory