Page 209
THE CONTRIBUTIONS
OF HOWARD YALE McCLUSKY TO AN EVOLVING DISCIPLINE OF EDUCATIONAL GERONTOLOGY
Educational Gerontology: An International Quarterly, 6:209-226,1981
Copyright
@ 1981 by Hemisphere Publishing Corporation, A Taylor and Francis
Journal.
Reprinted by Permission of the Journal's
editor.
[Editor's
comment: It is with great pleasure that I announce the appointment of
Dr. Howard McClusky as Honorary Lifetime Editor of Educational Gerontology:
An International Quarterly. D. Barry
Lumsden]
Roger
Hiemstra, Syracuse University
The
development of interest, knowledge, and professional involvement in educational
gerontology has been evolutionary. Knowledge from various disciplines has
contributed to this development. Howard McClusky, professor emeritus of adult
education and educational psychology at the University of Michigan, has made
many valuable contributions. His advocacy of limitless human potential throughout
life has included work toward the development of knowledge about adults as
learners and corresponding instructional needs. McClusky's development of
a "theory of margin
" has facilitated
an understanding of the need to balance in the later years those stresses
and demands (load) on a person with his or her coping resources (power).
He also has provided insights to program developers regarding the importance
of time perceptions and differences in how learning needs are categorized.
He calls for intergenerational approaches to older adult instruction efforts
and provides some optimistic hope for the future of educational gerontology.
INTRODUCTION
The
recent addition of educational emphases to a social and political involvement
with elderly-related problems, a steadily increasing "over-65" age cohort
with corresponding heightening consciousness, and a fairly rapid entry of
higher education during the seventies into serving adult learners have helped
to spawn a newly recognized discipline, educational gerontology. Like many
evolutionary movements the field of educational gerontology, even given the
recent attention, has been under development for many years. Peterson (1978)
suggests that many antecedents can be found in such widely separated interests
as industrial gerontology, psychogerontology , and social gerontology. However,
it has taken a growing number of voices lamenting society's underutilization
of older people as lifelong resources to swing attention toward education's
potential:
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In
particular, people whose major professional commitment is channeled through
institutions of education have begun to recognize that the values of study,
learning, and intellectual growth are not restricted exclusively to the young
but have relevance to persons of every age. This awareness appears to be
most pronounced at the fringes of educational development, e.g., in the areas
of adult, continuing, and community education. (Peterson, 1978, p. 4)
No
one person who has been involved with the development of educational gerontology
both during the many years of evolutionary change and the recent decade of
activity better bridges all three areas of adult, continuing, and community
education than Howard Yale McClusky, professor emeritus at the University
of Michigan. In addition to these three areas McClusky brings to educational
gerontology knowledge, expertise, and experience in such disciplines as
psychology, mental health, public health, youth education, community development,
and educational psychology.
Retired
one day in 1968 after 45 years of teaching, scholarly productivity, and service
at the University of Michigan, he abandoned retirement the next day and maintains
a torrid pace of public speaking, part-time teaching, serving in visiting
professorships, and writing. Much of that energy has been devoted to work
in the educational gerontology area through teaching, administration, and
advising graduate students. Today, at age 81, Howard seems to be gathering
new energies as he demonstrates his limitless potential through new writing
projects, a constantly filling calendar, and numerous plans for the future.
McClusky
and others through published materials have captured his major contributions
to educational gerontology. Those discussed in this article focus on:
These
three areas are inherently interrelated because of the internal consistency
of Howard 's thinking, but are separated for purposes of extracting implications
and important learnings. Suggestions for future practice will be added where
appropriate.
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Howard
McClusky-A Man of Many Times!
Born in New
York in 1900, Howard has spent all his adult life in the middle part of the
country except for periodic sabbaticals, visiting professorships, and a brief
interruption from 1940-42 when he served as associate director of the
Washington-based American Youth Commission. McClusky received a bachelor's
degree from Park College in Missouri in 1921 and a doctorate in psychology
from the University of Chicago in 1929 where he was a Commonwealth Fund Fellow
carrying out research in visual education, the forerunner of instructional
media.
His professional
education career began at the University of Michigan in 1924. He was an
instructor in educational psychology from then until 1927, assistant professor
from 1927 to 1934, associate professor from 1934 to 1939, and was appointed
full professor in 1939. He served an administrative stint from 1934 to 1939
as assistant to the vice president in charge of university relations. In
1948 he established and chaired the university's graduate department of community
adult education. In 1973-74 he served as chair of the university's program
in educational gerontology.
Howard's
awards, special services, and pioneering firsts have been many. The following
are only a few:
1938-Headed
Kellogg Foundation project assisting rural communities (helped to establish
the university extension service)
1940-Appointed
associate director of the American Youth Commission
1942-Appointed
chief of the National Organizations Section of the Office of Civilian Defense's
Civilian Mobilization Branch and consultant to the Office of War Information
1950-Awarded
the Michigan Educators Club Trophy for Conspicuous Service
1951-Elected
first president of the newly formed Adult Education Association of the U.
S.A.
1956-Recipient
of the Delbert Clark Award in Adult Education
1957-Helped
establish Commission of Professors of Adult Education
1958-Recipient
of University of Michigan Faculty's Distinguished Achievement Award
1964-Appointed
Senior Consultant in adult education by the United States Office of Education
1969-Recipient
of a special award of recognition by the State of Michigan 's legislature
for service to the state
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1975-Recipient
of Adult Education Association of the U.S.A.'s Pioneer Award
McClusky's
professional life and interests have been extremely varied. Although there
are obviously overlaps from one time period to another because professional
strengths and interests continue throughout life, Table 1 demonstrates how
his content interests and primary clients have gradually shifted during this
career. Between 1924 and 1979 some 70 journal articles, 31 monographs, book
chapters, or books, and 57 pieces in bulletins, newsletters,
or conference proceedings were published under Howard s authorship. In addition,
evidence of 431 speeches delivered by Howard at banquets, workshops, and
meetings during this period was found.1 These writings and speeches
were analyzed to assist in the table's development.
One
interesting conclusion after examining his interests and activities is that
Howard has been a man of his own time by changing his primary clients to
progressively older people as he himself aged. He spent much of his first
15 years at the University of Michigan helping to train teachers
McClusky
began making his main contributions to educational gerontology when he was
asked to cochair the Section on Aging for the 1971 White House Conference
on Aging. The educational background paper that Howard authored (1971c) and
the conference proceedings that he helped with have become cornerstones for
much of the subsequent thinking about the educational potential of the aged:
When
we turn to education we find a more optimistic domain. In fact, education
is itself essentially an affirmative enterprise. For instance, education
for older persons is based on the assumption that it will lead to something
better in the lives of those participating. It also proceeds on the collateral
assumption that older persons are capable of a constructive response to
educational stimulation. (McClusky, 1973b, p. 2)
___________________________
1An
extensive search in
two universities, three interviews and
considerable correspondence with Howard, and hundreds of hours
of
detective work by the author uncovered the described works. However, some
publications and speeches, no doubt, were still overlooked. A bibliography
is available
on-line.
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213
Table 1
Eras in Howard McCluskys Professional
Life
Time
period |
Professional
goals |
Content
interests |
Primary
clients |
1924-1934+ |
Establishing
professional self and identity |
Visual
education, youth education and adolescent
psychology |
Teachers
in training |
1929-1939+ |
Developing
professional legitimacy |
Mental
health, mental hygiene, and general education |
Parents
and teachers |
1935-1947+ |
Building
professional solidarity |
Educational
needs of older youth, rural youth, and young
adults |
Those working
with older and rural youtha |
1939-1957+ |
Establishing
self in adult education and community development
fields |
Educational
psychology as it related to adults |
Adult educators
and those interested in working with adults |
1958-1978+ |
Statesman
role in adult and community education |
Applying
psychology to adult education, adult learning, and community
education |
Professionals, teachers, and
learners in adult education |
1970-present |
Contributing
to educational gerontology |
Educational
gerontology, older adult learning needs, and general adult
education |
Older adults,
adult educators, educational gerontologists |
aServed as associate director of American Youth Commission
1940-1942 and worked with it in an advisory capacity several additional
years.
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Whether by
circumstance or by design, Howard has emulated with constant optimism this
belief in the limitless potential of humans during their lifetime through
his efforts in developing the educational gerontology field. The purpose
of the following sections is to summarize these many contributions.
ADULTS
AS LEARNERS
Howard's
faith in limitless human potential is seen in his thinking
about
adults as learners and his challenge that learners still can do more:
One
can teach an old dog new tricks! He [sic.] may not want to learn new
tricks or he may think that his old tricks are good enough, but an "old dog"
can no longer hide behind an assumed lack of ability to learn as an excuse
for not learning. In fact, because of his age there are probably some tricks
that an old dog can learn better than a younger. (1971b, p. 416)
Many
of his writings have been devoted to helping others gain a broad understanding
of the conditions leading people to constantly learn new tricks. He also
has used his broad background and training in psychology, his endless appetite
for reading, and his penchant for keeping up with all aspects of research
on humans to educate about adults as learners. In 1959 he and a colleague
summarized much of the existing theory and research related to the psychology
of adults (McClusky and Jensen, 1959). Four years later Howard described
the various developmental stages in adulthood (McClusky, 1963a). Many of
his additional writings and speeches have described such features as the
human condition, the need to consider the human organism's personality as
an important part of the stimulus-response model, and the history of adult
learning theory; perhaps the most comprehensive of these is a chapter that
describes the relevance of psychological knowledge for adult education (McClusky,
1964). A recent article builds a literary bridge describing the knowledge
growth in adult learning from the Thorndike era through the extensive research
of the 1970s (McClusky, 1978a).
One
of the results of McClusky's synthesizing activities related to research
on adult psychology and learning has been his long and active call for an
instructional body of knowledge specific to the adult condition:
Data from various sources are providing a growing case for a differential psychology of adults. Already it is clear that the pattern of abilities in-
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creases
in difference from adolescence through early adulthood and on
into
the middle and late years. Moreover, we cannot assume equivalence of stimulation
and motivation in these successive stages of change. . . more research is
greatly needed, but it must be conducted with concepts and instruments that
are most relevant to the unique features of the adult condition.
For example, more work needs to be done on
an appropriate criterion of adult intelligence, on "age fair" tests, an on
devices that get beneath the surface of the adult personality. (McClusky,
1965, p. 197)
He
has translated his call for specific knowledge and more research into educational
terms which constitute an occupational basis for the professional existence
of many of us:
Our
thesis then is simply that education becomes the generic term for the
teaching-learning process which in all its variety and manifold settings
constitutes the major instrument which our society has devised for reducing
the number and damage of dysfunctional responses and for increasing our
capability
in coping creatively with change. (McClusky, 1971a, p. 217)
Howard
's transition to considerable concern about the older adult, therefore, has
not been difficult:
I
have come into the field of gerontology from the domain of adult
education. The gerontological movement is geared pretty much to the
protection of older people and the production of a floor of support, so
that
older people can live in dignity and self-respect and as independent as possible.
This is as it should be. But the educational approach is a little different.
As educators, we assume that the client is capable of improvement. (McClusky,
1976b, p. 118)
Thus,
because of its faith in the learning ability of Older Persons and because
of its confidence in the improvement that results from learning, education
in contrast with other areas in the field of Aging can be invested with a
climate of optimism which is highly attractive to those who may be
involved
in its operation. (McClusky, 1973a, p. 60)
This
positive assumption by educators that their clients are capable of improvement,
learning, and change throughout life has facilitated the evolvement of teaching
and learning strategies specifically
for the older adult.
Howard perhaps says it best of all those who talk about such strategies:
So, what I am saying is that if we approach the field of gerontology from an educational standpoint, we constantly see evidence of the fact that older people are learning and can renew their faith in their ability to learn. As a consequence, we must find ways to help people rediscover,
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reinvigorate
and reactivate their latent interests and talents they never thought they
had. (McClusky, 1976b, p. 119)
We
can see evidence that educational gerontology professionals are finding means
of helping older persons enhance their learning abilities. Programs like
Elderhostel, the increasing numbers of older students in college and
adult education programs, and the growing successes by older people in learning
endeavors are some of the examples to which one can point. Perhaps the next
step will be the identification through research of teaching strategies and
approaches that will maximize such successes. Howard gives us some clues
as to what is needed:
Generally
speaking . . . good strategy is to create an environment that is supportive,
and to learn techniques that can reinforce learning. For example, we should
be very clear as to what we expect them to learn. We should give them techniques
of imagination, combining both auditory and visual imagery. Self-pacing is
another important procedure. We should allow the older person to pace himself
[sic.] and learn in his own way and in his own time, without too much pressure.
(McClusky, 1976b, p. 121)
Much
of the recent research described in Educational Gerontology has examined
many of these suggestions but additional research and development is still
required if Howard's belief in the profession's ability to facilitate human
potential development is to be fully realized.
THEORY
OF MARGIN
"Howard
Y. McClusky is perhaps best known within the theoretical context of adult
education for his power-load-margin. . . formula." (Main, 1979, p. 19) Certainly
Howard himself has described his theory in many publications (1963a, 1967,
1970a, 1970b, 1971c, n.d.), and his colleagues such as Main (1979) and Baum
(1978) have added considerable insight into the theory's usefulness. The
purpose of this section is to describe the theory, talk about its applications
to the field of educational gerontology , and suggest some
implications
for future development of the theory.
The
theory of margin is
defined as follows:
Margin
is a function of the relationship of load to
power. By load we mean the self and social demands required
by a person to maintain a minimal level of autonomy. By power we mean
the resources, i.e., abilities, possessions, position, allies, etc., which
a person can command in coping with load. (McClusky, 1970b, p. 27)
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The
theory also has been visualized as a formula, with load in the numerator
and power in the denominator (Baum, 1978; McClusky, 1963a,
Main,19792):
Margin
=
Load/Power [Load divided by Power]
Surplus
power provides a margin of cushion to handle load requirements. Margin can
be increased by reducing load or increasing power. Howard suggests, subsequently,
that if values could be assigned to load and power indicators, a resulting
equation score of say .50 to .80 would provide enough margin to meet the
various emergencies of life (1963a).
Although
empirical work necessary to refine the definitions and provide value indicators
for data collection purposes has not been completed, Baum (1978) and Main
(1979) have worked with Howard to develop initial variable definitions:
Load
consists of "self" and society demands(a) external-tasks of living
(family, occupational, social, etc.) and (b) internal-personal life expectancies
(goals, values, attitudes, etc.)
Power
consists of the resources accumulated by a person(a)
externalaccessible resources and capacity (health, wealth, social
abilities, etc.) and (b) internal-acquired skills and experiences (resiliency,
coping skills, personality, etc.)
Operational
definitions are still required but, as McClusky notes, "The value of the
Load-Power ratio consists in its usefulness in describing the amount of Margin
involved in adult adjustment." (1963a)
This value
can be seen directly when applying the theory to learning activities in the
later years during which radical changes in the load-power ratio may take
place because of fixed incomes, death of spouse, etc.:
In
the light of our theory therefore, a necessary condition for learning is
access to and/or the activation of a Margin of Power that may be available
for application to the processes which the learning situation requires. (1970a,
p. 146)
The
crucial element is giving a person coping skills in maintaining a surplus
of power:
_____________________
2Main
(1979) places power in the numerator, apparently as a means of
illustrating that surplus margin is more easily understood when the value
is greater than one.
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For
example, if the aging person could replace the load required by the achievement
of upward mobility or by the maintenance of social status, with the load
or tasks of community services, or the preservation of things (natural or
manmade) of beauty, and if by a program of study and training the older person
could increase his [sic.] ability to engage in such activities, his resulting
margin could conceivably be more productive, satisfying, and growth-inducing
than anything done earlier in life. . . [thus] education can be, if properly
conceived and implemented, a major force in the achievement of this outcome.
(McClusky, n.d., p. 330)
Numerous
implications exist for educational gerontologists from the theory of margin
construct. Main (1979) has conceptualized a teaching and learning model based
on power and load ideas. As another example, Figure 1 provides some refinement
suggestions by the author for measuring, evaluating, and planning programmatic
responses to load and power imbalances. It is hoped that future researchers
and theoreticians will develop additional refinements to the margin theory.
In characteristically optimistic fashion, Howard provides the motivation
for carrying out such refinements. He suggests that ages 0-25 are when margin
is developed; ages 25-45 are when margin is expanded; beyond 45 is when what
he calls the transvaluation of margin is possible: "This writer [McClusky]
holds that by realigning and transvaluing the relationship of Load to Power,
the later years may in fact be a period of progressive growth." (1970 p.
150). Research completed by many scholars in the past decade has, in fact,
demonstrated that mental growth is possible and takes place during the later
years. A better understanding of load and power relationships may facilitate
our future attempts to develop growth promoting programs.
ADDITIONAL
CONTRIBUTIONS
An
attempt to capture all of the additional contributions made by McClusky is
not possible in one short article. However, there are
three
other areas in which Howard has been interested that have high research potential
to those interested in educational gerontology.
Time
Perception
Howard
has been interested for several years in the perceptions of time by adults
and what relevance such perceptions have on a person's psychological makeup:
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The
psychology of adults is distinguished from the psychology of earlier years
in the experience of time. The major events of life can be expected to occur
in the plus or minus five decades of adult life. To be aware that
one is behind on, or ahead of schedule of life expectations can have a profound
effect on life adjustment. (McClusky, 1963a, p.
18)
Figure 1. Suggested framework for planning educational programs based on load and power balances.
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Such
perceptions may have a profound effect on a person 's receptivity to learning
opportunities. "It makes a great deal of difference in one's orientation
whether the future lies ahead as it does at 20, is here today as it may appear
at 40, or is past in memory or ahead in one's children as it is often viewed
at 70." (McClusky, 1964, p. 160)
A
related feature of this perception of time is the common experience that
time appears to pass more rapidly each year of our life. There may be a partial
explanation in what Howard has referred to as the "arithmetic of time":
At
16, one year is one 16th of the time a person has lived, at 40 one year is
a 40th and at 70 a 70th of the time lived. Thus with advancing years, a unit
of time, e.g., one year, becomes a decreasing fraction of the time experienced
and is so perceived. This fact added to the decrease in perception of life
expectancy undoubtedly has a profound and pervasive impact on the attitudes
of adults as the years unfoldan impact which in turn also affects an
adult's perception of his [sic.] potential as a learner. (McClusky, 1971b,
p.423)
Similarly,
the demands of time on an adult can be very great. One pull often competes
with another pressure or commitment, frequently putting active learning endeavors
at a disadvantage:
Hence,
when learning takes over, some other activity must give way. Often the margin
of preference is so narrow that much of the time he [the adult] allocates
for learning is in fact devoted to a preoccupation with the attractions or
obligations of the activity he [sic.] was compelled to set aside. (1971b,
p.427)
Considerable
study may be required to know just how accurate is Howard 's supposition
and what import it may have in the later years. However, certainly the problem
of time allocation must remain of concern to all adult learners and their
teachers:
This
subject [time perception] deserves far more investigation than it has heretofore
received. But in spite of the lack of data, the educator will find that the
adult's attitude toward time is one of the most pervasive factors with which
he [sic.] must deal. It is the hidden item in many decisions to learn or
not to learn, as well as what to learn when the decision to study is made.
(McClusky, 1964, p. 162)
Categories
of Need
Howards work in preparation for the 1971 White House Conference on Aging apparently was a time for him of considerable reflection,
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synthesizing
from his earlier publications, and fresh ideas. A significant contribution
was his thinking through some implications of this theory of margin in terms
of various age-related needs. He introduced for scholars and planners to
consider five distinct need categories including corresponding relationships
to the theory of margin concepts:
He
subsequently describes need categories in other sources too (1971d, n.d.).
The
five-part framework has since been utilized by several people in their research
and program design efforts. Graney and Hays (1976), for example, suggest
that the needs formed a useful hierarchy. They note that this deductive
contribution by McClusky provides "professionals with knowledge about the
functional needs of older
persons to enable them to [better] guide
educational practice." (1976, p. 344)
Community
of Generations
A
promising recent notion of Howard 's is his call for interaction between
the generations in promoting education through the later years. He cautions
that his suggestions still are in a very embryonic state:
Because
of the incomplete and provisional state of our knowledge, this. . . is
necessarily exploratory in character and makes no pretense of constituting
a definitive statement of the field. It is offered. . . primarily as a means
of opening up a new domain of practice and inquiry. . . (1978b, pp.50-51)
The concept of the community of generations is an intentional variation on a life-span approach to comprehending the wholeness of life. It is based on the assumption that, although separated by time and experience, each
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generation
nevertheless has a common stake with other generations in
relating
the wholeness of the life-span of which it is a part. (McClusky, 1978b, p.50)
Differences
will naturally exist between generations because of varying values, beliefs,
and experiences, but such differences only accent the need people have of
learning from one another.
Howard
also suggests that such differences have potential for the teaching and learning
process because a wider variety of instructional strategies can be employed,
strategies that make use of the rich experiences and specific needs some
learners bring to the classroom setting. He offers a projection that all
of higher education will be affected:
It
is quite possible that because adults are returning to instruction in increasing
numbers the student body traditionally composed of a ghetto of middle and
upper middle class students will be supplanted by a student body composed
of persons ranging in age from early to late adulthood and thus pave the
way for an intergenerational approach to instruction that could ultimately
transform higher education as we now know it. (McClusky, 1978a, p. 13)
In
essence, McClusky is challenging future scholars to examine inter- generational
approaches to instruction so that improvements in the total instructional
process can be made.
CONCLUSION
Howard
McClusky has demonstrated throughout his adult life exactly what he believes:
that each person has an endless potential, vitality, and resiliency. His
concern for knowing more about how to maximize that potential has influenced
most of his professional activities:
The
task of society is to produce a generation of Persons in the Later Years
who are 'models of lifelong fulfillment for the emulation and guidance of
oncoming generations' and that life at its best in the Later Years should
be a guide for education at all earlier years of life leading thereto. (1976a,
p. 11)
He
is such a model and continues to provide guidance in the development of many
educational efforts.
McClusky's contributions to educational gerontology via early work in adult education have all helped to foster a rapidly growing
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discipline. Obviously,
the ultimate value of his work will be its usefulness in spawning research,
thinking, and writing by others. His challenge to colleagues to do so is
inherent in almost everything he has written.
There
is perhaps one more side of Howard that when described will best provide
an ending mechanism for this discussion. He is a "futurist" by nature. He
has shown this both by his perpetual optimism and through his professional
activities. He has long had an uncanny ability to foresee needs and happenings
and to inspire others into enthusiastic activities toward the future. For
example, he foresaw the need for adult educators to become involved in community
development activities long before the community education and community
college movements started their rapid expansion efforts (1939, 1944). He
described the need for education to be preparation for life several
years before career education, self-directed study, and lifelong learning
came into vogue (1936, 1974). Several years before years before the growth
spurt of adult education began in the United
States Howard described how adults
learn3 and suggested that a big potential for future adult education
efforts existed (1948). He was involved with education efforts for the aging
well before his 1971 White House
experience.4,5 As
one more example, Howard and I taught in a team in 1969 at the University
of Michigan what may have been the first graduate course on the future of
adult education.
Howard used
his prognostication skills several years ago to suggest that we are becoming
a learning society:
In
brief we are saying that we are well on the road to developing a culture
where learning in some form must become increasingly a way of life for the
vast majority of all ages of the population. To a degree unknown in any other
time in history, schooling for youth will become a relatively smaller part
of a larger, more inclusive societal effort. As emphasis on the importance
of education inevitably increases, adults will step up their demands for
continuing education for themselves, as well as that kind of education for
their children which they will more and more recognize as necessary for the
viability of their future. (1963b, p. 118)
__________________________________
3Howard
Y. McClusky, Can adults learn? A Rackham Graduate School lecture,
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich.,
1939.
4Howard
Y. McClusky, Adult Education and Aging. A panel presentation,
American Educational Research Association meeting, Atlantic City, N.J.,
1950.
5Howard
served as a reviewer of the recommendations made at the White House Conference
on Aging, Washington, D.C., 1961.
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However,
the final realization of such changes will necessitate some rather large
and perhaps difficult modifications in education as we now know it:
To
be more explicit, it is my position that the emphasis on lifelong learning,
i.e., the kind of learning that will continue to the end of life, will
require a drastic reconceptualization of the lifelong developmental stages
of human existence in a way that is not currently being envisaged. (1976a,
p.11)
The
required change in the educative processes will affect both adult education
and educational gerontology:
To
summarize, by the year 2000 the fields of both Adult Education and Gerontology
will be experiencing a stage of dynamic development.
Adult
Education will have moved from the margin to the center of
educational
practice and the Elderly, with a growing number of influential spokesmen
[sic.] and reinforced by the pressures of a growing societal concern,
will
be in a better position to claim their share of educational resources. The
climate will have become extremely favorable for the development of a wide
range of programs in a diverse assortment of agencies. (McClusky, 1978c,
p. 172)
Our
challenge is to facilitate excellence as these many diverse developments
unfold. Educational gerontology is still new enough that we may not yet know
exactly what "excellence" is. However, Howard McClusky has shown us by example
and by deed how to move toward such a goal.
REFERENCES
Baum,
J. An exploration of widowhood: Implications for adult educators. Paper
presented at the Adult Education Research Conference, San Antonio, Texas,
April 5-7, 1978. (ERIC Document Reproduction Service No. ED 157989).
Graney,
M. J. & Hays, W. C. Senior students: Higher education after age 62.
Educational Gerontology, 1976, 1, 343-360.
McClusky,
H. Y. The community seminar for adult education. The School Review,
1939, 47, 331-334.
McClusky,
H. Y. The community approach to adult education. University of Michigan
School of Education Bulletin, 1944,15(6),84-87.
McClusky,
H. Y. The education of young adults. In M. L. Ely (Ed.), Handbook of adult
education in the United States. New York: Institute of Adult Education
and American Association for Adult Education, 1948.
McClusky,
H. Y. Course of the adult life span. In W. C. Hallenbeck (Ed.), Psychology
of adults. Chicago: Adult Education Association of U.S.A., 1963. (a)
Page 225
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H. Y. The demand for continual learning in modern society. University
of Michigan School of Education Bulletin, 1963, 34(8), 113-118.
(b)
McClusky,
H. Y. The relevancy of psychology for adult education. In G. Jensen, A. A.
Liveright, & W. Hallenback (Eds.), Adult education: Outlines of an
emerging field of university study. Washington, D.C.: Adult Education
Association of the U.S.A., 1964.
McClusky,
H. Y. Psychology and learning. Review of Educational Research, 1965,
35,191-200.
McClusky,
H. Adventure and the emerging roles of the adult education leader. The
N.U.E.A. Spectator, 1967, 32(5), 14-17, 27.
McClusky,
H. Y. An approach to a differential psychology of the adult potential. In
S. M. Grabowski (Ed.), Adult learning and instruction. Syracuse, N.Y.:
ERIC Clearinghouse on Adult Education, 1970. (ERIC Document Reproduction
Service No. ED 045 867). (a)
McClusky,
H. Y. A dynamic approach to participation in community development. Journal
of Community Development Society, 1970, 1, 25-32.
(b)
McClusky,
H. The AEA-USA: Why and what it must be. Adult Leadership, 1971,
20, 126-128, 152-154. (a)
McClusky,
H. Y. The adult as learner. In S. E. Seashore & R. J. McNeill (Eds.),
Management of the urban crises. New York: The Free Press, 1971. (b)
McClusky,
H. Y. Education: Background paper for 1971 White House conference
on aging. Washington, D.C.: White House Conference on Aging, 1971. (c)
McClusky,
H. Y. Education for the aging. Florida Adult Education, 1971,
21 (Spring), 6-7. (d)
McClusky,
H. Y. Education and aging. In A. Hendrickson (Ed.), A manual on planning
educational programs for older adults. Tallahassee, Fla.: Department
of Adult Education, Florida State University, 1973. (a)
McClusky,
H. Y. Co-chairman's statement (section on education). In Toward a national
policy on aging (Final report, Vol. II, 1971 White House Conference on
Aging). Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1973. (b)
McClusky,
H. Y. The coming of age of lifelong learning. Journal of Research and
Development in Education, 1974, 7(4), 97-107.
McClusky
, H. Y. Adult dimensions of lifelong learning: Reflections on the future
of the educational enterprise. Innovator (School of Education Newsletter,
University of Michigan), 1976, 8(2), 11-12.
(a)
McClusky,
H. What research says about adult learning potential and teaching older adults.
In R. M. Smith (Ed.), Adult learning: Issues and innovations. DeKalb,
Il.: ERIC Clearinghouse in Career Education, Department of Secondary and
Adult Education, Northern Illinois University, 1976.
(b)
McClusky,
H. Y. The adult as lifelong learner: Some implications for instruction in
higher education. Educare Journal, 1978, 5(Spring), 8-13. (a)
McClusky,
H. Y. The community of generations: A goal and a context for the education
of persons in the later years. In R. H. Sherron & D. B. Lumsden,
Introduction to educational gerontology. Washington, D.C.: Hemisphere
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H. Y. Designs for learning. In L. F. Jarvik (Ed.), Aging into the
21st century. New York: Gardner Press, 1978. (c)
McClusky,
H. Y. Education for aging: The scope of the field and perspectives for the
future. In S. M. Grabowski & W. D. Mason, Learning for aging.
Washington, D.C.: Adult Education Association of the U.S.A. & ERIC
Clearinghouse on Adult Education, n.d. (ca. 1974).
McClusky,
H. Y., & Jensen, G. E. The psychology of adults. Review of Educational
Research, 1959, 29,246-255.
Main,
K. The power-load-margin formula of Howard Y. McClusky as the basis for a
model of teaching. Adult Education, 1979, 30, 19-33.
Peterson,
D. A. Toward a definition of educational gerontology. In. R. H. Sherron &
D. B. Lumsden, (Eds.), Introduction to educational gerontology.
Washington, D.C.: Hemisphere
Publishing Corporation, 1978.
Schorling,
R., & McClusky, H. Y. Education and social trends. Chicago: World
Book Company, 1936.
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