Family therapy has enthusiastically taken up certain concepts for adult education but has not benefited from the full range of ideas that are now both available and compatible with current epistemologies. Good practice in formulating learning objectives is discussed and the objectives of this article are specified. Areas of psychology that are relevant to adult learning are reviewed, and concepts of adult education that are important in the training of family therapists are considered. A model of a spiral process of learning that has been developed within the Leeds Family Therapy and Research Centre is proposed. The model coordinates the principles of adult learning described in the article and may be used as a framework for considering whether training will achieve its learning objectives as well as allowing people engaged in learning to gain further insight into how they learn. Readers are encouraged to use the principles of active reflective learning during their processing of the article. © 2005 The Association for Family Therapy and Systemic Practice.
CITATION STYLE
Stratton, P. (2005). A model to coordinate understanding of active autonomous learning. Journal of Family Therapy, 27(3), 217–236. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-6427.2005.00313.x
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