By Susan C. Lane, Ed.D.
It is rare in your professional life that you can create policy direction around an area in which you have been invested for so many years. This is exactly the opportunity I had via my membership in CAEL’s Policy Advisory Group.
For most of my career in postsecondary education my work has focused on advancing success for the adult learner, in traditional and nontraditional settings, degree programs, certificates, and workshops. In each institution, public, private or for-profit, and in each role from staff, faculty, to president, I struggled to move institutional and academic policies and practices to open doors and create pathways rather than expand hoops and barriers.
I was thrilled to join CAEL’s Policy Advisory Group and to set a focus on the very things within the power and capacity for an institution, program, and leaders to address. While I have long supported larger goals of increasing financial aid or changing state or federal polices to favor the adult and part-time learner, I have maintained there are many barriers that institutions and individuals can change and just get rid of to support success for the adult learner.
CAEL’s policy Centering the Adult Learner identifies these areas, offers solutions, and most important, creates visibility and a community for so many committed individuals. Those who may be working in small teams or alone no longer have to feel that they are working in isolation, or that their effort at reducing a single barrier doesn’t matter. They are now part of a community advancing success for the adult learner, and their work matters.
Centering the Adult Learner
Adult learners have often been an afterthought when it comes to postsecondary education and training, as our nation has for too long maintained laser focus on the seamless high school graduate to four-year college pipeline. That conversation is changing with today’s ever-changing economy, increasing automation and AI, and the growing recognition that lifelong learning, upskilling, and reskilling are necessary for economic growth and opportunity. Policies that center the adult learner and their unique circumstances are more effective at recruiting, retaining, and helping these students succeed.
POLICIES THAT | SUPPORT THE ADULT LEARNER
CAEL's full policy overview is available at cael.org.