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E-book: Reimagining Adult Education as World Building: Creating Learning Ecologies for Transformation [Taylor & Francis e-book]

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"Reimagining Adult Education as Worldbuilding offers a new way of thinking about adult education by reenvisaging how adult education works. It explores how the process of worldbuilding, or the invention of a new world or a set of concepts, can be translated into actual and feasible action when turning towards complex, real-life problems. Cultivating contexts where adult educators can become change agents, who recognize that the individual and community are intricately entangled, demands that educators grow new capacities, make new tools, develop thicker networks, and cultivate intentional links amongst each other to foster ecologies of transformation. This book shows how educators can create an ecology or environment for transformative thinking where students can learn to collaborate and use worldbuilding tools to create new responses to current issues. It begins by explaining the philosophical underpinnings of worldbuilding and the tools that translate pragmatic imagination into scaffolds for individualand collective capacity building. It also illustrates how the worldbuilding protocol makes a difference in adult learning and how this pedagogical tool introduces the ecological approach to adult education. Each chapter explores a practical case study, showing how learners have applied worldbuilding tools to complex challenges. Showing how to apply the worldbuilding protocol in a classroom setting, this edited collection will be valuable to Adult Education scholars, researchers, practitioners, and learning facilitators"--

This book offers a new way of thinking about adult education by reenvisaging how adult education works. It explores how the process of worldbuilding, or the invention of a new world or a set of concepts, can be translated into actual and feasible action when turning towards complex, real-life problems.



Reimagining Adult Education as World Building offers a new way of thinking about adult education by re-envisaging how adult education works. It explores how the process of world building, or the invention of a new world or a set of concepts, can be translated into actual and feasible action when turning towards complex, real-life problems.

Cultivating contexts where adult educators can become change agents, who recognize that the individual and community are intricately entangled, demands that educators grow new capacities, make new tools, develop thicker networks, and cultivate intentional links amongst each other to foster ecologies of transformation. This book shows how educators can create an ecology or environment for transformative thinking where students can learn to collaborate and use world building tools to create new responses to current issues. It begins by explaining the philosophical underpinnings of world building and the tools that translate pragmatic imagination into scaffolds for individual and collective capacity building. It also illustrates how the worldbuilding protocol makes a difference in adult learning and how this pedagogical tool introduces the ecological approach to adult education. Each chapter explores a practical case study, showing how learners have applied worldbuilding tools to complex challenges.

Showing how to apply the world building protocol in a classroom setting, this edited collection will be valuable to Adult Education scholars, researchers, practitioners, and learning facilitators.

1. Ruptures in Adult Education
2. Rethinking Pragmatism Through World Building as a Research Method
3. Reducing Polarization Through Informal Facilitators of Learning
4. Beyond the Learning Curve: The Roughness of Learning
5. Utilizing World Building to Explore Vaccine Hesitancy
6. Decolonizing Adult Education: An Imagined Potential
7. Iteration, Creation, and Frustration: Student Perspectives on World Building in the Classroom
8. Half-baked and Muddling Through: A Critical Collaborative Autoethnography of a Minor Pedagogy
9. (Re)Imagining Adult Education as Ecologies of Transformation

Aliki Nicolaides is Professor of Adult Learning, Leadership, and Adult Development at the University of Georgia, USA.

Ahreum Lim is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Generative Learning and Complexity Lab at the University of Georgia, USA.

Neal Herr is a Graduate Research Assistant in the Learning, Leadership and Organization Development program at the University of Georgia, USA.

Trisha Barefield is a Doctoral Candidate in the Learning, Leadership and Organization Development program at the University of Georgia, USA.