To
entertain a course of study is not so easy an undertaking as it first appears.
One is, by law in most countries, required to attend some sort of educational
establishment, or, in the absence of a school or similar institution, one is
require to receive some sort of tuition which is commensurate with what is
considered to be a basic education.
This Basic
Education refers to the
whole range of educational activities taking place in various settings (formal,
non formal and informal), that aim to meet basic learning needs. According to
the International Standard Classification of Education (ISCED), basic education
comprises primary education (first stage of basic education) and lower
secondary education (second stage). In countries (developing countries in particular),
Basic Education often includes also pre-primary education and/or adult literacy
programs. The ISCED for 2011 follows, with Levels 1, 2 and 3,
highlighted, as they are the usual legal requirements in most countries.
Level
|
ISCED 2011
|
Description
|
0
|
Early
childhood Education (01 Early
childhood educational development)
|
Education
designed to support early development in preparation for participation in
school and society. Programmes designed for children below the age of 3.
|
0
|
Early childhood
Education (02 Pre-primary
education)
|
Education
designed to support early development in preparation for participation in
school and society. Programmes designed for children from age 3 to the start
of primary education
|
1
|
Primary education
|
Programmes typically designed to provide
students with fundamental skills in reading, writing and mathematics and to
establish a solid foundation for learning.
|
2
|
Lower secondary education
|
First stage of secondary education building on
primary education, typically with a more subject-oriented curriculum.
|
3
|
Upper secondary education
|
Second/final stage of secondary education
preparing for tertiary education and/or providing skills relevant to
employment. Usually with an increased range of subject options and streams.
|
4
|
Post-secondary
non-tertiary education
|
Programmes
providing learning experiences that build on secondary education and prepare
for labour market entry and/or tertiary education. The content is broader
than secondary but not as complex as tertiary education
|
5
|
Short-cycle
tertiary education
|
Short first
tertiary programmes that are typically practically-based,
occupationally-specific and prepare for labour market entry. These programmes
may also provide a pathway to other tertiary programmes.
|
6
|
Bachelor or
equivalent
|
Programmes
designed to provide intermediate academic and/or professional knowledge,
skills and competencies leading to a first tertiary degree or equivalent
qualification.
|
7
|
Master or
equivalent
|
Programmes
designed to provide advanced academic and/or professional knowledge, skills
and competencies leading to a second tertiary degree or equivalent
qualification.
|
8
|
Doctoral or
equivalent
|
Programmes
designed primarily to lead to an advanced research qualification, usually
concluding with the submission and defence of a substantive dissertation of
publishable quality based on original research.
|
Levels
4 to 6 are now considered to be essential in order to obtain some form of
employment. Most people who attain level 3 are between 15 and 18 years of age. The
majority of people in this world barely reach level 3.
Levels
4 and 5, are pretty much required to “make a living’ and are very often
undertaken, at a later age, by people who missed out on education up to level
3.
Usually
one has to have progressed through levels 1-5 in order to move on to levels
6-8. Of those entering level 6 a small, but now growing, percentage move on to
level 7. Indeed level 7 is now seen by many, who have undertaken level 6, as an
essential. Those who have moved through the levels as some sort of progression
have often reached level 8 by the time they are 30 years of age and have
established what can only be described as an Academic Identity; although, in
many instances there is usually a hiatus between levels 7 and 8, but the
‘student’ has usually remained in academic circles and academic identity is
thus acquired. So long as the ‘student’ remains in academic institutions that
identity will enfold around him/her.
There
is now a new breed of student seeking to acquire an academic identity. The late
starter, more often referred to as the mature student, and the retired
professional. These are people who have perhaps tired of reading fiction and,
for some unfathomable reason begin to seek answers to questions of a more metaphysical
nature. They are a growing genus of students who now prowl the libraries and
universities round the country. Often they are more elderly than their
supervisors.
Still,
they have a considerable adjustment to make. Often they come across material
which strikes them as something they have thought for some time, but never
expressed. Indeed they often come across material they wish they had produced
themselves. That is, they get an idea, only to find that the idea has already
been well documented and well presented. The parameters of their thinking
during their working lives have not truly prepared them for the global
contemplations of the academic world. To come up with something new in a world
of ever developing and polished ideas is somewhat daunting with a brain that
has seen better days. But still they plough and prowl on. Perhaps something
will come out of it. An academic identity perhaps?
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