Adult high school

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Template:Short descriptionAn adult high school or adult school is a high school facility designed for adult education. It is intended for adults who have not completed high school to continue their education. Some adult high schools offer child care, special integration programs for immigrants and refugees, career and other programs and services geared toward the special needs of adult students. Some adult high schools may also offer general interest programs such as computer skills or other continuing education courses.

History

Samuel Fox is credited with helping William Singleton to start the first "Adult School"<ref name="british">Template:Cite web</ref> in Nottingham, England in 1798.<ref name="notts">Template:Cite journal</ref> Initially, the classes were for young women from local lace and hosiery factories.<ref>Quakers and Adult Schools Template:Webarchive, infed.org, accessed January 2010</ref> William Singleton, a Methodist, started the school, but it was Fox and the staff from his grocer shop that maintained it. Fox's staff was expected to teach at this school and Fox provided breakfast at 9 a.m. on a Sunday after they had completed two hours of teaching.<ref name="rowntree"/> The school grew to include men, but it was said that Fox was specifically interested in improving adult education. Lessons are believed to have started with a Bible reading, but the book was then used as a textbook to enable scholars to practise reading and writing. Fox conducted lessons for three mornings a week for students of more advanced arithmetic and he would fund some to go to become teachers themselves.<ref name="rowntree">Template:Cite book</ref>

Individual schools were affiliated to the National Adult School Union. At an event in October 1948 in Nottingham to celebrate the Union's 150th anniversary, it was stated that delegates from between 700 and 800 schools across England, Wales and Scotland were invited.<ref name="NEP-02101948">Template:Cite news</ref>

References

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