[NIFL-4EFF:1027] RE: Summit's Alternative Goal, revised

From: Debbie Tuler (djt9u@virginia.edu)
Date: Wed May 17 2000 - 13:30:00 EDT


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From: Debbie Tuler <djt9u@virginia.edu>
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Subject: [NIFL-4EFF:1027] RE: Summit's Alternative Goal, revised
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Ronna,
Thanks for recapping/summarizing the discussion here about the goal of the
adult education/literacy field.  At first I thought having a vision and goal
in one statement was fine, because we're dealing with a large field and not
a single organization.  But after reading your message over again, I've
changed my mind and want to throw in another idea before we move on to
priorities and action steps.

Jane's restatement: "Every adult will possess the knowledge and skills
required to access needed information, take independent action, express
their own ideas and opinions, keep up with a changing world, and exercise
their rights and responsibilities as family members, workers, and community
members" is a very strong vision for our society and country.

But perhaps we do need a separate goal which indicates what WE, the adult
education/literacy field, are going to do to bring that vision to reality.
Something like: The goal of the adult education/literacy field is to
(develop and) maintain a system of programs and services that assist
(enable? provide?) adults in meeting...(take wording from vision above).

Debbie


Debra Tuler
Organizational Development and Training
University of Virginia
2400 Old Ivy Road, Suite B
P.O.Box 400803
Charlottesville, VA  22904
(804)243-8968




-----Original Message-----
From: nifl-4eff@literacy.nifl.gov [mailto:nifl-4eff@literacy.nifl.gov]On
Behalf Of Rgspacone@aol.com
Sent: Monday, May 15, 2000 1:00 PM
To: Multiple recipients of list
Subject: [NIFL-4EFF:1022] Summit's Alternative Goal, revised


Hello Everyone,

In this message, I've tried to recap our discussion of the National Literacy
Summit-related Goal and Vision. It's rather lengthy and might be easier to
understand if you print it out first. I've included our reasons for wanting
to scrap the original Goal statement; our recommendations for adopting the
alternative Goal and revising it; and some thoughts about needing a goal and
a vision, and maybe a mission statement.

So far, we've agreed the original Goal should be scrapped, that is: "By the
year 2010, the United States will be the most literate nation in the world,
with 70 percent of the population achieving literacy at or above the NALS
Level 3."  Our reasons include: NALS has little meaning to adult learners
and
to our programs; the national goal should not be phrased in terms of one
measurement; comparing literacy in the U.S. to other nations is irrelevant;
the target date seems meaningless; and this Goal excludes any mention of the
purposes for the learning, the people and the services involved.

We prefer -- and want to revise -- the alternative goal: "Adults in every
community in the U.S. will benefit from a system of high quality literacy
services that helps them reach their full potential as workers, family
members, citizens and lifelong learners." As it is, this goal is too vague
and we had trouble with the pharses, "will benefit from" and "full
potential."  The first because it sounds judgemental, and the second because
it's beyond the scope of our responsibilities.

Amy suggested: "Adults in every community in the U.S. will have access to a
system of high quality literacy services which help them reach their goals
as
workers, family members, citizens, and lifelong learners."  This followed
Tina's suggestion that EFF be explicit to the Goal, putting forth: "Adults
in
every community in the U.S. will benefit from a system of high quality
literacy services that is based on the EFF content framework" on the basis
that EFF includes the critical adult roles and responsibilties and the
appropriate guidelines for developing literacy services (i.e., the standards
and the assessment framework that's being developed).

Although there seems to be consensus that we'd like to propose a goal
statement around the four purposes for learning and the roles, more than one
of us thinks explicit mention of EFF belongs in the strategies and action
plan, and the development of the system --  not in the Goal itself.

Sondra shared how the state of Washington framed the vision for their state
plan:  "All adults will have access to adult and family literacy services
that assist them gaining the skills required to: access needed information,
take independent action, express their ideas and opinions, keep up with a
changing world, and exercise their rights and responsibilities as family
members, workers, and citizens."

This is similar to the initial EFF reversion of Goal 6 proposed in the book,
Customer-Driven Vision: "By the year 2000, every adult will be literate and
will possess the knowlege and skills necessary to orient themselves in a
rapidly changing world, to voice their ideas and be heard, and to act
independently as parents, citizens and workers, for the good of family,
community and nation."

Finally, Jane suggested a restatement of the alternative Goal that combines
Washington and EFF's:  "Every adult will possess the knowledge and skills
required to access needed information, take independent action, express
their
own ideas and opinions, keep up with a changing world, and exercise their
rights and responsibilities as family members, workers, and community
members."

Through our discussion, we've acknowledged it's important to be clear among
ourselves about what the terms, vision and goal and mission mean. Chris
shared his definitions: "The Vision is about our community or society and
what we want it to be. The Mission is a statement about the organization's
role in accoplishing the Vision. Goals are broader statements, with
objectives defining the specifics of that goal. Objectives are monitored,
while attainment of goals are evaluated."

It's been suggested we need a mission statement, but Chris has pointed out
that any discussion in terms of a mission should occur at the organizational
or regional levels. And then where does a discussion of the objectives
belong?

Do we think a separate vision and goal are necessary to guide our field
through the next 10 years?  What we have been discussing is more a Vision
than a Goal, although perhaps the EFF standards do provide a way to propose
measures for it.  Knowing this, are we then satisfied to have Vision and
Goal
rolled into one?

In your opinions, does the alternative Goal need any further modifications?
Are there any other thoughts or ideas about this, before we turn our
attention to the eight Priority Strategies and Action Steps?

Thanks!

Ronna

Ronna Spacone
NIFL-4EFF List Facilitator
Rgspacone@aol.com

P.S. The National Literacy Summit Draft Action Agenda is located at:
<http://www.nifl.gov/nifl/summit/agenda.html>



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