ABSTRACT

Within the UK and Europe, government legislation and policies concerned with demography have asserted a paradigmatic shift towards the increased engagement of older people with public services. The philosophy of user involvement and co-production within these contexts has become integral to finding ways in which to improve the wellbeing of older people and their experiences of ageing well.

Whilst this area has been steadily emerging within the educational field in relation to the lifelong learning of older people, there has been a relative under-theorization and a lack of empirical research however into the lifelong learning needs, opportunities and experiences of those older people using social care who are typically marginalized from these debates and developments. This book address this gap by paying specific attention to examining what opportunities might be present within care services and public services in general for older people using social care to capitalize on the skills and knowledge they might need to achieve more person-centred support.

Through developing a debate and argument for the convergence of the lifelong learning agenda with social policy and social care, its core argument focusses on the challenge of sustainability of the care and support of older people. The author explores how social care could engage more meaningfully with concepts such as social capital and the challenges associated with achieving a genuine co-productive approach towards the quality of experience of older people using social care. This book will be an essential read for professionals working with older people in health and social care, as well as those engaged with gerontology and ageing studies in education and practice.

 

 

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|11 pages

Theories of learning and pedagogies

An introduction to key concepts

chapter 3|12 pages

Learning in later life

Policy perspectives

chapter 4|19 pages

Theories of learning in later life

chapter 5|17 pages

Conceptualising lifelong learning within social care

Creating a framework for practice

chapter 6|21 pages

Learning opportunities and learning experiences when using social care

Findings from an empirical research study

chapter 7|22 pages

Co-producing learning for professional education

Two case studies

chapter 9|15 pages

Developing professional knowledge and skills and expertise

Challenges for practitioners

chapter 10|2 pages

Final reflections