The Long History—and Important Future—of Adult Education

How programs that have quietly been helping Californians since 1856 may be the answer to recovering from 2020

Multiracial group of students working on computers in a classroom.

It’s hard to believe adult education has been around for 150 years, but so many people don’t fully understand what it is, what it does or what impact it could have on our state as a whole.

“Adult education is still the best-kept secret because we offer the same programs private schools offer but we don’t charge for them,” says Susan Lytle Gilmore, Ph.D., director of adult education for Sacramento City Unified School District. “Or…we charge just enough fees to cover the expenses of our teachers. We are significantly less expensive than private schools.”

What we’re looking at is huge—63% of all jobs that will come available in the U.S. require education beyond a high school diploma. And 50% of our workforce has achieved a high school education or less.”

Susan Lytle Gilmore, Ph.D., Director of Adult Education, Sacramento City Unified School District

As a result, Gilmore has spent her decades in adult ed getting the secret out. She tells the story of going to dinner with a friend, who explained her granddaughter wanted to go into nursing. But the $35,000+ tuition for the private LVN program meant the young woman’s father must give up retirement and return to work.

“I said, ‘Have her come to us!’” Gilmore recalls. In fact, Sac City’s health education program at the Charles A. Jones Career & Education Center is nationally accredited, so “we can offer Pell Grants and Stafford Loans, and students graduate owing almost nothing.”

Her advice was gratefully accepted. “And I was at that graduation party—the entire family was so happy,” she says. “She graduated, got a job and was on her way. Her father didn’t have to go back to work.”

Gilmore also believes adult education plays a pivotal role in jump-starting the California economy, both now and in the future. “What we’re looking at is huge—63% of all jobs that will come available in the U.S. require education beyond a high school diploma,” she says. “And 50% of our workforce has achieved a high school education or less. Our challenge is to attract them to come to our programs and get what they need. We need to be creating pathways for students to escape all the barriers they have.”

Finally, Gilmore says adult education programs need partnerships with community colleges, workforce development boards, labor unions and volunteer-based organizations. A good template for that is the new manufacturing program at Charles A. Jones, which was created with help from the Sacramento Employment Training Agency and the City of Sacramento, along with a $264,000 grant from the Sacramento Valley Manufacturing Initiative.

“Leadership isn’t about a title,” Gilmore likes to say. “It’s about impact, influence and inspiration.”

To learn more about the history of adult education in California, visit caladulted.org. To learn more about Sacramento City Unified School District’s adult education programs, visit scusd.edu/adult-education-schools or call 916-643-7400.

Written by Thea Marie Rood

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