Vol 1, No 1 (2012)

The Legacy of PLA: 40 Years of Practice

We celebrate the recognition of prior learning. An experimental activity that began in earnest less than a half-century ago in a handful of North American colleges and universities is now practiced in thousands of institutions, large and small, across the world and referred to in many ways. Initiated as a means to legitimate the power of experience, to acknowledge the limitations of traditional assumptions about knowledge, and to question seat time as the only means to judge true learning, the recognition of prior learning has become a critical tool of access and a significant part of a movement for educational and social justice.

This inaugural issue of PLAIO focuses on the historical roots of prior learning assessment and examines how these foundations are connected to--or disconnected from--current trends in higher education.

Table of Contents

Editorial

Alan Mandell and Nan Travers
The Power of Experience Inside Out
Alan Mandell, Nan Travers
PDF

Invited Essays

Elana Michelson
PDF

Inquiry (Peer-Reviewed)

Shelley Stanhope-Goodman, Pamela M. Nordstrom
PDF
David Starr-Glass
PDF

Interviews

Sir John Daniel
Imagining What is Open: An Interview with Sir John Daniel
Alan Mandell, Nan Travers
PDF
Debbi Dagavarian
Recognizing PLA: An Interview with Debbi Dagavarian
Viktoria Popova-Gonci
PDF

Practice Today

Lea McKay
Making Experience Count for Entry to B.A. Management with Advanced Standing: A Case Study in RPL
Lea McKay
PDF

Reviews

Xenia Coulter
The Complexities of Research into Prior Learning Assessments: Some Reflections
Xenia Coulter
PDF

Ask A Question

Morry Fiddler
Searching for a PLA/RPL Model
Morry Fiddler
PDF

Resources

Diana Bamford-Rees
PDF
Cathy Brigham
PDF
John Konrad
PDF

PLIRC Research Database

Christine Wihak, Judy Harris, Norm Friesen, Joy Van Kleef
PDF

Networking

PLA Inside Out
PDF