Nonformal Education in Ghana


Book Description

Project report describing rural area nonformal education activities carried out in Ghana during 1976 and 1977 - discusses project design and collaborative programme development, training of rural animators with regard to rural development, the role of popular culture groups, etc., and considers goals relating to adult literacy and support of indigenous mechanic and skilled worker occupational trades. References.
















Non-formal Education for Training in Integrated Production and Pest Management in Farmer Field Schools


Book Description

Non-formal education is an important aspect of training for agricultural extension agents and farmers. This study written as a field guide draws on long experiences of national integration production and pest management programmes in Asian countries, where the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation developed its concepts. By appropriately adapting these concepts to local field and farming situations in Ghana, the guide provides basic topics and exercises to enable the incorporation of non-formal education into training for farmers in West Africa. The guide gives additional information on the general principles of adult learning, methodology of non-formal education, teamwork, leadership and decision-making.




Globalization, Non-formal Education, and Rural Development in Developing Economies


Book Description

Drawing on the results of non-formal education programmes inspired by Brazil's famous educationalist, Freire, particularly non-formal education and literacy programmes in Brazil, Ghana and Tanzania, the author illustrates and advocates the potential of non-formal education as a key component of bottom-up, human-centred development in Africa. He thus allies the process of non-formal education to developing countries' efforts to come to terms with current trends in globalisation, which have precipitated unemployment and urbanisation with devastating consequences for rural development and educational progress. Through close examinations of the trajectory of globalisation and its impact on poor countries, unemployment, the linkages between non-formal education and development, and the role of the media in non-formal education, the book argues that non-formal education and functional literacy programmes offer the best prospects of meaningful development in poor countries, some substantive critiques of non-formal education notwithstanding.




Nonformal Education and National Development


Book Description

Research report on the role of nonformal education in economic and social development in Africa, Latin America and Asia - provides case studies of rural Animation, educational television in the Cote d'Ivoire, functional literacy in Mali, occupational choice of unemployed youth in Zambia, and mobile training in Thailand; explains impact on industrial workers' wages in Venezuela; discusses the limits and value of out of school education in terms of the economics of education; evaluates popular participation in Ghana and Indonesia. Bibliography.







Non-Formal Education


Book Description

The Comparative Education Research Centre (CERC) at the University of Hong Kong is proud and privileged to present this book in its series CERC Studies in Comparative Education. Alan Rogers is a distinguished figure in the field of non-formal education, and brings to this volume more than three decades of experience. The book is a masterly account, which will be seen as a milestone in the literature. It is based on the one hand on an exhaustive review of the literature, and on the other hand on extensive practical experience in all parts of the world. It is a truly comparative work, which fits admirably into the series Much of the thrust of Rogers' work is an analysis not only of the significance of non-formal education but also of the reasons for changing fashions in the development community. Confronting a major question at the outset, Rogers ask why the terminology of non-formal education, which was so much in vogue in the 1970s and 1980s, practically disappeared from the mainstream discourse in the 1990s and initial years of the present century. Much of the book is therefore about paradigms in the domain of development studies, and about the ways that fashions may gloss over substance.