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2013 Annual Conference

November 5–8, 2013

Lexington, KY

It is time to review the schedule for the placement of your session in the AAACE Agenda. This is the final draft of the Schedule. When you look up your name, use the detail listing to check what days/times you asked to be placed. This is a huge program and we can accommodate necessary changes in day and time now, but may not be able to do so after September 1, 2013 except in emergencies. Please carefully check your placement and send any requests to Ginger Phillips, AAACE Conference Planner with AAACE Session Change Request in the subject line. We will respond to your email, but it may take us up to a week to do so. Thanks for your help in "fine tuning" this agenda!

Civic Engagement: Our Role in Community Education and Development

Wednesday, November 6, 2013 at 4:00 PM–4:45 PM EST
PattersonB
Type of Presentation

Workshop (60-75 minutes)

Session Abstract

Adult Education practitioners have long been called upon to engage in community development by means of education. As issues of undereducation, underemployment, poverty, and violence continue, in urban as much as rural contexts, our role is changing ... or is it? ... or ought it?

Target Audience

AE practitioners; instructors of education (k-12 and AE); parents; students; principals/administrators; program designers

Learning Outcomes

Participants will be able to:

- Identify and analyze the concept of civic engagement in the context of education programs
- Define the role of education in community development. economic sustainability, and public institutions (e.g., K-12 schools)
- Identify and analyze the roles educators have, will, can, and ought to play in community development and community well being

Session Description

The workshops will identify what impact to prevailing concept of civic engagement has on public and private education institutions and the preparation of educators, design of education programs, and collaboration across society's sectors. It also takes a look at the opportunities and possibilities for collaborating across age-specific education programming and examines models of education that are intergenerational, project-based, competence-based, and formal as much as non-formal. The key ideas are grounded in action research conducted with an urban community of primarily African-American and Latino residents.

Efforts are made to try to schedule sessions on the day preferred by the Primary Presenter, though this cannot be guaranteed. Please check your preference.

No preference

Primary Presenter

Dr. Gabriele Strohschen, DePaul University
Work Title

Associate Professor

Additional Presenters: Enters In Order.

Michele Begovich, DePaul University
Work Title
Ms Christine Johnson, DePaul University
Work Title
Saowanee Eiathakul, DePaul University
Work Title
Cherise Williams, DePaul University
Work Title
Carlas Prince Gilbert, DePaul University
Work Title
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