jobs.ac.uk - Great jobs for bright people
  • Find a Job
  • Find PhDs
  • Career Advice
  • Jobs by Email
  • Advertise a Job
  • Recruiters
  • Your Account
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to secondary sidebar

career-advice.jobs.ac.uk

Secondary Sidebar

jobs.ac.uk - Great jobs for bright people
  • Find a Job
  • Find PhDs
  • Career Advice
  • Jobs by Email
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Accessibility Statement

Copyright © jobs.ac.uk 1998 - 2025

  • Find a Job
  • Find PhDs
  • Careers Advice
  • Jobs by Email
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Accessibility
jobs.ac.uk - Great jobs for bright people

Copyright © jobs.ac.uk 1998 - 2025

Returning to Education in Adulthood

Adults returning to education

The purpose of this article is both to highlight barriers to the learning process and to share some techniques and strategies teachers can use to help overcome them.

Barriers to adult learning

The key barriers identified through research are:

  • lack of time and energy
  • negative perceptions of education from their own experiences
  • lack of available courses
  • lack of support
  • lack of confidence in own abilities

From my own experiences of working with adults returning to education, there can be a mixture of excitement and apprehension. Physically entering a classroom for the first time is an intimidating experience for most adults; that first step can be daunting and scary. Making a welcoming environment is absolutely essential to help adults feel safe. Valuing adults as a resource is a key motivational strategy; life experience is a real asset when working with adults, and drawing on this helps to foster a sense of self-worth.

The biggest external barriers for most adults returning to education are access and affordability; both tuition fees and childcare present significant financial barriers. As for internal barriers, I would say confidence is the most significant; the big step coming back into a classroom environment cannot be underestimated; some adults may have been out of education for a considerable period of time.

Returning to education is a step-by-step approach and each step needs to be managed carefully. Common issues that working with adults can present include; study skills may need development; undiagnosed learning disabilities such as dyslexia can become evident; anxiety around assessment. For most adults, returning to education is not only about their own aspirations, it is also about their family’s well-being. Being a lifelong learning role model for their children can be a strong motivator for adults on their own learning journey but the other aspects of their learning experience may overshadow this motivator if not recognised and supported by the teacher.

Techniques and strategies

Key ways to create a positive learning environment for adults include:

  • involving learners in planning methods, assessment and curriculum content (where possible)
  • involving learners in identifying their own learning needs;
  • asking learners to write their own learning objectives for lessons;
  • encouraging learners to evaluate their own learning and development

With an ever-changing labour market, it is very likely that if you work in FE, you will work with adults returning to education; to upskill, retrain or as a second chance opportunity. Recognising what motivates adults to return to education is vital for their success, as is valuing what they bring with them in terms of life experience. Awareness around the additional challenges they may have as a student population with regards to outside commitments, such as work and family, are important to keep in mind alongside their affective needs related to being a student again.

As a teacher of adults, you will need to consider barriers to learning as a key part of your practice, in both planning and delivery, and it requires interpersonal skills as much as teaching expertise.

What did you think of our article? - please rate

4 / 5. 1


Share this article

Reader Interactions

Written by Careers Advice

You may also like:

  • What's the difference between FE and HE Lecturers?

    What's the difference between FE and HE Lecturers?

  • The impact of Further Education (FE) phone policies

    The impact of Further Education (FE) phone policies

  • college students Participating in Engineering Class

    What are the benefits of working in Further Education?

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

eight + twelve =

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Primary Sidebar

Follow us

Learn how to manage a lack of feedback when job searching

Latest Jobs

  • Programme Manager - Education & Childcare

    Keighley College

    Location: Keighley

    Salary: £38,651 - £42,223 per annum


  • Lecturers - PMLD and SLD - 1 permanent post; 1 fixed term post until 14th July 2026

    HRUC

    Location: Hayes, Uxbridge

    Salary: £32,455 - £45,260 per annum including London Weighting Teacher training provided


  • Biology Teacher

    Health & Life Science, De Montfort University International College

    Location: Leicester

    Salary: £32.50 per hour


  • Lecturer in Foundation Learning

    Nottingham College

    Location: Nottingham

    Salary: £32,445 - £40,560 per annum (pro-rata for part-time posts)


  • Programme Leader – Teacher Development (ECF and ECTE)

    About UCL Institute of Education, UCL

    Location: London, Hybrid

    Salary: £67,341 - £75,192


  • Lecturer in Education (PGCE Primary)

    Faculty of Social Sciences - School of Education and Lifelong Learning, University of East Anglia

    Location: Norwich

    Salary: £38,784 Starting salary from £38,784 per annum, dependent on skills and experience, with an annual increment up to £46,049 per annum.