In Pursuit of Lifelong Learning
  Nancy Merz Nordstrom, M.Ed, EGenerations Columnist - January 17th, 2008    Views: 305    Rated: 

For those of you that are committed to lifelong learning, the following list from Autodidactic Press–www.autodidactic.com-is an excellent compendium of ways to keep lifelong learning in your every-day life. Autodidactic Press is dedicated to two propositions:
(1) That lifelong learning is fundamental to living a full and interesting life, and
(2) That the learning necessary to gain competence in a job or career is far, far more important than how or where it was acquired.

According to the site, “self-education is the essence of genuine learning. Self-education provides the vitality that enables us to turn information into knowledge and to use it in such a way that it adds meaning to life. Indeed, without the dynamism of self-education, we fail to develop our own interests to the degree that they become driving forces in their own right. When our motivation arises from internal sources the value of lifelong learning becomes readily apparent to us.

Adult learning is more than alternative education, self-help, self-study or training. Self-directed inquiry can free you from the cultural traps of today’s postmodern world. When you think for yourself, you take control of your life. Intellectual ability and critical thinking soon become substitutes for paper credentials. You’ll enjoy a higher quality of life, make smarter career choices, and begin to see ways to better our society.”
 
52 Ways to Pursue Lifelong Learning

1. Look up a new word every morning and figure out three ways to use it during the day.

2. Read
that book you picked up months ago and haven’t opened yet.

3. Listen
to audio books or language tapes while you drive.

4. Watch
only informative TV shows.

5. Write
a letter to the editor of the newspaper or magazine of your choice expressing your opinion on the issue.

6. Find
out how to send e-mail to the President or another lawmaker of your choice. See if you can get a dialogue going.

7. Investigate
one or more newsgroups on the Internet and check in at least once a day.

8. Attend
an open meeting or public forum each noon hour or evening for a week.

9. Sign
up for a night course, workshop, or seminar.

10. If
you work in a large company or organization, pay a visit each day to someone you barely know-in another department, for instance. Get better acquainted with these people; find out more about their work and how it relates to your own.

11. Take
photos of ten things (places, objects, people) that best symbolize who you are. Then take ten more of things that represent your dreams. (Twelve each would fill a 24-roll exposure roll) Put the photos together in an album or a montage.

12. Pick
two prominent figures–one from history and one now living. Find out as much as you can about their roles in society, their family lives, and their accomplishments. Then make a side-by-side list comparing the two.

13. Visit a library or bookstore every day and spend some time looking through sections you’ve never explored before. Make a list of the titles or subjects you find to be most interesting.

14. Attend a lecture.

15. Go to a foreign movie–or to a foreign country.

16. Compile a reading list of books you intend to read during the next year, and pick one to start off with.

17. Plan or start your own personal library of the books that mean the most to you.

18. Share with others a list of the most inspiring books you have ever read.

19. Reread a book you thought was difficult or “over your head” the first time you tried it.

20. Form a roundtable discussion group to discuss books and ideas.

21. Join or start a friend’s of the public library group.

22. Join a book club.

23. Choose a prominent figure in history, science, politics or the arts. Resolve to see how much you can find out about that person in books, movies, newspapers and conversation with friends and associates over the next year. Study the person’s original work and compare your opinions with the commentary of others.

24. Write an article for your company, institution, hobby, club, or community organization newsletter or magazine.

25. Write a letter to the editor of your local paper. See how clearly and succinctly you can make your point.

26. Visit a museum or gallery.

27. Sign up for a class on a subject that’s new to you but highly interesting.

28. Offer to teach a class for a community education enterprise. (A sure way to learn a subject is to teach it.)

29. Listen to literary classics or foreign language instruction tapes in your car every day for a week, instead of music.

30. Watch an hour of public television each night instead of cable.

31. Practice the tutorials for a new piece of computer software.

32. Write a brief summary of your life so far, or depict your life graphically on a large sheet of paper.

33. Spend a week reading material with which you strongly disagree.

34. Create (or update) your resume.

35. Search a large computer database using your favorite subjects as key words.

36. Write your own obituary. What goals do you hope to meet in your lifetime? What do you want most people to remember about you?

37. Spend some time asking the oldest (and hopefully the wisest) people you know what were the major lessons that they have learned from life.

38. Read the Declaration of Independence and the United States Constitution.

39. Volunteer eight hours of your time to a nonprofit organization.

40. Spend a day or a week “media free” no radio, TV, books or magazines – entertain nothing but your own thoughts.

41. Peruse introductory books to philosophy with the goal of discovering your favorite philosopher.

42. Sign
up for music lessons.

43. Learn enough of a computer programming language to write a simple program.

44. Set aside a half-hour each day to examine some of your fundamental beliefs about the world. Contrast them with opposing views. For example, why do you belong to one political party instead of another? And are your reasons for believing as you do your own or did you borrow them from friends and family in the process of growing up?

45. Outline the major events in your life as if it were a play. How many acts would there be and how would they be named? What would be the name of the play?

46. Study the nature of your career, occupation or the means with which you earn a living and make some predictions about the future of that enterprise. If you are retired examine the career field of a friend or relative.

47. Write an essay (or make a list) describing what you think were the greatest errors and accomplishments of the twentieth century. How can these lessons make life better in the twenty-first century.

48. If you are a worker read a book about management; if you are a manager read a book written from the perspective of workers.

49. Take the time to master that piece of hi-tech equipment that you dread the most. Read the instruction manual, call the engineers who designed it.

50. Memorize a poem.

51. Take an art class.

52. Subscribe to SELF-UNIVERSITY NEWSLETTER.

* The above information was reprinted, with permission from www.AutoDidactic.com

Don’t Miss Out on This Special Opportunity for Readers of this Column
A Reminder – If you want to test the waters of lifelong learning, I can’t think of a better way then by spending one day listening to award winning professors from Harvard, Yale, Brown, Princeton, Dartmouth, Columbia, The University of Pennsylvania, Cornell and other top tier schools, who come together to offer you an elite, live classroom learning experience.

Check out www.onedayuniversity.com to learn more, and see if there’s a one-day university near you.  If so, when you register, thanks to your reading of this column, you will get a 15% discount on the cost of the program.  Just type in the word “LIFELONG” as your coupon code when you register at the website, or use it when calling 800-811-8821 to register.  It’s that simple!

Till Next Time…

 


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Nancy Merz Nordstrom. M.Ed., is the author of "Learning Later, Living Greater: The Secret for Making the Most of Your After-50 Years". Her book, according to Ken Dychtwald, is a “compelling and user-friendly guide to lifelong learning and, in many ways, a complete redefinition of the after-50 years.”

Nancy also directs the Elderhostel Institute Network (EIN), North America's largest and most respected educational network for older adults. More than 360 lifelong learning institutes with over 150,000 members are affiliated with the Network.

For more information – Elderhostel Institute Network

  • Read Nancy’s story on her Journal


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