Lifelong Learning is for Everybody
For many years institutions of higher education have been emphasizing the importance of lifelong learning as an important goal for their students. The goal is to give students the skills and knowledge for them to continue to engage in learning about things that will enhance their knowledge and capabilities in their professional and private lives. Several years ago, I attended a celebration of the tenth anniversary of a psychological services center on the campus of a very large university. The ceremony included talks by alumni of the doctoral program in Clinical Psychology. One of the speakers said that he now does many things that he did not learn in graduate school. He went on to say that his graduate education taught him how to learn those things and that he was grateful for what he had learned in his graduate program because those skills allowed him to be successful in his career. This alumnus was clearly a lifelong learner, and his program could be credited with giving him the skills to be so.
Lifelong learning should be a goal not only for students but also for faculty members and administrators. Faculty members teach in a specific discipline. All disciplines increase their knowledge through research which often results in publication in professional journals.