This is an excerpt from the paper... The population of adult learners is increasing beyond that of any other segment of the population groups in higher education (Bowden & Merritt, 1995). Teaching literacy, technology, and more to adults is a common practice. Adult education is a source for information and services for some and it is a way to achieve higher degrees and wages for others (Ashcroft, 2003; Elman & O'Rand, 2004; Goodson, 2002). Adult education is advertised as having the ability to change an individual's life (Denyer, Gill, & Turner, 2003). Ntiri (1999) described the typical adult learner as female, and employed full-time in a technical, business, or professional field. These students are called nontraditional since they differ from the average college students ranging in age from 18 to 24 years. Richardson and King (1998) noted that while the adult learner tends to be female and of a minority ethnic group, the usual underpinning a
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