“It is not Working for Them but with Them”: Adult Educators Roles With Community Groups in Transforming Communities
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Adult Learning
Abstract
This paper reflects on Freire’s
discourse on liberating education and adult
educators’ educational roles with community
groups in transforming communities. Mineral rich communities in Ghana are
in danger of losing water
bodies, rich arable lands, and
forest vegetation cover
through “galamsey,” which
refers to the gathering of rich
mineral resources illegally for
sale. Yet the fourth Industrial
Revolution Age positions
adult educators strategically in
making learning the needed
skill among community
groups to improve
communities. This qualitative
study adopted
a convenience sampling
procedure to select and
interview eight graduate students in a higher
education institution (HEI) in Ghana. Data were
analyzed using thematic and narrative
approaches. The results indicate that adult
educators’ educational roles are empowering, yet
they should employ more dialogical, story telling, and conversational approaches; and
must listen to community members’ views on
community development programs. The study
concludes that adult
educators drive community
development programs via
inclusiveness and networks
to make communities
sustainable.
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Research Article
