A history of the Adult Education Association of Virginia

This study was concerned with the founding and development of the Adult Education Association of Virginia (AEAV). The principal objectives of the study were to describe the organizational structure of AEAV; examine AEAV’s financial status at selected intervals; appraise the leadership and membership...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ruble, William C.
Other Authors: Adult and Continuing Education
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/74677
id ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-74677
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-746772021-04-16T05:40:58Z A history of the Adult Education Association of Virginia Ruble, William C. Adult and Continuing Education Stubblefield, Harold W. Flowers, W. Hunt, Thomas C. Miles, Leroy P. Snizek, William E. Adult Education Association of Virginia -- History LD5655.V856 1983.R825 This study was concerned with the founding and development of the Adult Education Association of Virginia (AEAV). The principal objectives of the study were to describe the organizational structure of AEAV; examine AEAV’s financial status at selected intervals; appraise the leadership and membership of AEAV; relate AEAV programs and activities to social, economic, and political trends; and explain the relationship of AEAV to other adult education organizations. Sources of information were documents located in the official files of AEAV and the Adult Education Association of the United States of America (AEA/USA), to include minutes, correspondence, financial reports, membership lists, promotional brochures, and newsletters. Information was also collected from newspapers and personal interviews with individuals. Persons interviewed were questioned about events or activities in which they had participated or about which they had specialized knowledge, an approach that did not lend itself to the use of a standard data collection instrument. Following a series of postwar meetings sponsored by the University of Virginia, adult educators gathered in October, 1951, in Richmond, Virginia, and organized AF.AV. From the beginning, AEAV’s principal instrument of program activities was its annual conferences. Regional conferences were used to publicize AEAV programs and to promote adult education. Contact with the membership between conferences was maintained by periodic issues of a newsletter. Operating funds were derived from membership fees, annual conferences, rebates from AEA/USA, and subsidies from state institutions. Membership was never large but, except for women and minorities, it was representative of Virginia adult education activities. Recently, membership composition has changed and it now consists mostly of adult educators representing colleges and universities. AEAV members have chosen to ignore social, economic, and political forces and to concentrate their efforts on the technical aspects of adult education. In spite of a parochial approach to national issues, AEAV has good relations with other adult education organizations. As AEAV entered its fourth decade, members were considering a reorganization to broaden the membership base and to align the organizational structure more closely to that of the national association. Recommendations for further study concerned investigations of other adult education organizations. Ed. D. 2017-01-30T21:23:43Z 2017-01-30T21:23:43Z 1983 Dissertation Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/74677 en OCLC# 10658509 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ xv, 225 leaves application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Adult Education Association of Virginia -- History
LD5655.V856 1983.R825
spellingShingle Adult Education Association of Virginia -- History
LD5655.V856 1983.R825
Ruble, William C.
A history of the Adult Education Association of Virginia
description This study was concerned with the founding and development of the Adult Education Association of Virginia (AEAV). The principal objectives of the study were to describe the organizational structure of AEAV; examine AEAV’s financial status at selected intervals; appraise the leadership and membership of AEAV; relate AEAV programs and activities to social, economic, and political trends; and explain the relationship of AEAV to other adult education organizations. Sources of information were documents located in the official files of AEAV and the Adult Education Association of the United States of America (AEA/USA), to include minutes, correspondence, financial reports, membership lists, promotional brochures, and newsletters. Information was also collected from newspapers and personal interviews with individuals. Persons interviewed were questioned about events or activities in which they had participated or about which they had specialized knowledge, an approach that did not lend itself to the use of a standard data collection instrument. Following a series of postwar meetings sponsored by the University of Virginia, adult educators gathered in October, 1951, in Richmond, Virginia, and organized AF.AV. From the beginning, AEAV’s principal instrument of program activities was its annual conferences. Regional conferences were used to publicize AEAV programs and to promote adult education. Contact with the membership between conferences was maintained by periodic issues of a newsletter. Operating funds were derived from membership fees, annual conferences, rebates from AEA/USA, and subsidies from state institutions. Membership was never large but, except for women and minorities, it was representative of Virginia adult education activities. Recently, membership composition has changed and it now consists mostly of adult educators representing colleges and universities. AEAV members have chosen to ignore social, economic, and political forces and to concentrate their efforts on the technical aspects of adult education. In spite of a parochial approach to national issues, AEAV has good relations with other adult education organizations. As AEAV entered its fourth decade, members were considering a reorganization to broaden the membership base and to align the organizational structure more closely to that of the national association. Recommendations for further study concerned investigations of other adult education organizations. === Ed. D.
author2 Adult and Continuing Education
author_facet Adult and Continuing Education
Ruble, William C.
author Ruble, William C.
author_sort Ruble, William C.
title A history of the Adult Education Association of Virginia
title_short A history of the Adult Education Association of Virginia
title_full A history of the Adult Education Association of Virginia
title_fullStr A history of the Adult Education Association of Virginia
title_full_unstemmed A history of the Adult Education Association of Virginia
title_sort history of the adult education association of virginia
publisher Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/74677
work_keys_str_mv AT rublewilliamc ahistoryoftheadulteducationassociationofvirginia
AT rublewilliamc historyoftheadulteducationassociationofvirginia
_version_ 1719396561472978944