Minnesota Community Education Association

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Adult Basic Education

Education doesn’t stop at high school! Adults looking to earn their GED or get other skills can participate in free courses through Adult Basic Education courses

The mission of Adult Basic Education in Minnesota is to provide adults with educational opportunities to acquire and improve their literacy skills necessary to become self-sufficient and participate effectively as productive workers, family members, and citizens.

Adult Basic Education (ABE) is available statewide at no cost to adult learners and is funded through the Minnesota Department of Education. Each year, more than 300 delivery sites serve approximately 66,000 adult students. About one-half of these students are enrolled in English Learner (EL) programs. Licensed teachers provide ABE instruction and are assisted by more than 1,400 trained volunteers.

In order to enroll in ABE, you must be 17 years of age or over, not enrolled in secondary school, and seeking a secondary credential. You may also enroll if you are currently lacking skills in any of the basic academic areas, including reading, math, writing, and speaking English.

Local contact information related to ABE services can be found on the Minnesota Literacy Council website.

686

Earned a Diploma or G.E.D. in ABE*

2,262

Entered Postsecondary Education*

2,787

Entered employment*

7,589

Retained employment*

* Under-reported due to federal cohort procedures and follow-up issues such as mobility and data privacy.

ABE Programs

This is the national high school equivalency assessment operated by GED Testing Service and includes a set of four tests: Math, Reasoning through Language Arts, Science, and Social Studies.

Includes programs for eligible adults that leads to a high school diploma from a local Minnesota public school district

Includes programs for eligible adults based on English Language Arts, Mathematics, Science, Social Studies, and Employability/Career Development and Digital Literacy domains that embeds prior experience, standardized assessment, ABE instruction, and applied and experiential learning options. It leads to a high school diploma from the state department of education and possibly the local school district.

Includes instruction for learners whose native language is not English.

This program is for learners who need goal-specific elementary or secondary level basic skills, such as work-related math, functional literacy (e.g., banking skills), reading, or writing assistance. This program is generally considered a brushup and does not lead to a diploma or GED.

This is a program for adults and their pre-school children. It features instruction for adults in literacy, parenting, and educational/developmental services for children.

Civics education includes ESL, work readiness, and contextualized career skills to encourage full participation in U.S. communities and employment.

ABE Initiatives and Priority Program Areas

Adult Career Pathways

Preparing Adults for Postsecondary Education, Training, Employment and Workforce Education. Pre-employment programs to provide basic skills necessary for work are provided at the local ABE site or WorkForce Centers. ABE services are also provided at some local employers’ sites and are designed to improve the basic applicable work skills of the worker. Career pathway programming combines basic skills instruction, counseling, and college prep skills to better prepare students for postsecondary success in credit-bearing or credentialed programs and occupational programs at postsecondary institutions.

Distance Learning and Digital Literacy

Preparing Adults for Postsecondary Education, Training, Employment and Workforce Education. Pre-employment programs to provide basic skills necessary for work are provided at the local ABE site or WorkForce Centers. ABE services are also provided at some local employers’ sites and are designed to improve the basic applicable work skills of the worker. Career pathway programming combines basic skills instruction, counseling, and college prep skills to better prepare students for postsecondary success in credit-bearing or credentialed programs and occupational programs at postsecondary institutions.

Instructional Content

Objectives and Outcomes

Adult Basic Education addresses a variety of learner goals. ABE helps learners to:

  • Attain employment and/or better their current employment in order to become self-sufficient;
  • Achieve high school equivalency (GED or Adult High School Diploma);
  • Attain skills and certificates necessary to enter postsecondary education and training;
  • Learn to speak, read, and write the English language;
  • Master basic academic skills to help their children succeed in school;
  • Become U.S. citizens and participate in their local communities; and
  • Gain self-esteem, personal confidence, and a sense of personal and civic responsibility.

Selected Outcomes

The average participant in Minnesota’s ABE system received 140 hours of instruction in 2015 and 33% of ABE participants who had or earned a secondary credential were enrolled in postsecondary institutions within the first year after exiting ABE.

Membership

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Leadership & Governance

MCEA Leadership is focused on leading lifelong learning throughout Minnesota.

Professional Development

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