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PLATO Society of Los Angeles

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The PLATO Society of Los Angeles (formerly the PLATO Society of UCLA) is a lifelong learning institute in Westwood, south of the UCLA campus, that focuses on small peer-led study discussion groups. About 400 members attend 70 or more study discussion groups every year, year-round, that are designed and led by the members themselves.[1][2] Active over 40 years, the PLATO Society is the oldest lifelong learning institute in the western United States.[3][4][5] Its pioneering efforts created institute networking organizations[6][7] which helped new lifelong learning institutes get established more easily, resulting in their rapid spread throughout the USA.

History

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Educator Elizabeth L. Cless founded the PLATO Society of UCLA in 1980, in conjunction with UCLA Extension, based on her study and proposal for a self-directed, self-governing lifelong learning institute.[3] By 1983, with 239 members, the PLATO Society was already being run entirely by its members.[8]

In 1984, Francis Meyers, then the president of the PLATO Society,[9] founded and became president of ALIROW,[10] the first[6] networking organization for American lifelong learning institutes. The PLATO Society was one of its six founding institutes. For decades it facilitated communication and the spread of organizational information across the Far West region of the United States.[11]

In 1988, the PLATO Society and Meyers spearheaded the formation of a USA-wide institute network, the Elderhostel Institute Network, by working with four other well-established lifelong learning institutes and the travel corporation Elderhostel.[7] That network, now known as the Road Scholar Lifelong Learning Institute Network,[12] has over 400 member institutes.[13]

In 2013, faced with a challenge to its self-governance, the PLATO Society reconstituted itself as a nonprofit corporation, The PLATO Society of Los Angeles.[14][15]

In March 2020, responding to the onslaught of COVID-19, the PLATO Society moved its study discussion groups, Colloquia, and most committee activities fully online. Casual online "Lounge" meetings were added to compensate for the loss of in-person casual conversation among friends. The transition to fully online PLATO was remarkably smooth and has enabled the participation of members as distant as London, England. PLATO’s Medical Committee has advised that in-person operations can resume so some SDGs and other activities are live and some still on Zoom. [16]

Peer-led study discussion groups

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The New York Times profiled the PLATO Society, interviewed members, and sat in on a study discussion group (SDG) meeting.[17] Members of the SDG had a lively but orderly discussion about that week's topic. Every member had obviously studied the assigned books and articles in advance, and the discussion leader scheduled for that week led the discussion.

SDGs are the central learning activity of the PLATO Society. The peer-led, seminar-style discussion in a 14-member SDG adds a social aspect to learning, because differing viewpoints illuminate topics in useful and unexpected ways. There can be plenty of laughter, but at its heart an SDG is a pure, mentally stimulating intellectual exercise.[17]

SDGs are scheduled in three 14-week terms per year.[1] SDGs can be 14, 10, or 7 weeks in length.[1] (Members select 7-week SDGs to help schedule their vacations.)[18] An SDG divides up its topics at the start of a term so that each member can be the discussion leader in a specific week.[1][17] An SDG meets for two daytime hours on a weekday.[1]

SDGs originate with proposals from members on topics in art, biology, economics, history, literature, movies, music, political science, psychology, science, or technology.[1][17][19][20] Each proposal is ranked by members, gets worked out in detail by a member who agrees to be its "coordinator",[21] and then becomes available for members to select as their next term's SDG.

Programs

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The PLATO Society offers a program of eight Colloquia each year, which are major lectures at which important scholars, journalists, public officials, and other professionals give formal presentations on matters of general interest. Each Colloquium is held in the early afternoon in a large auditorium away from the PLATO facility, is announced in advance, and is open to the public, as well as to PLATO Society members, at no charge.[22] Video recordings of all Colloquia from 2013 to the present are viewable in the video gallery on the PLATO Society website.

The PLATO Society has a variety of extracurricular activities for members. They include monthly day trips to local places of interest, informal lunchtime presentations, social events, an annual three-day meeting at an outdoor retreat venue, group foreign travel, and non-sponsored interest groups.[23]

Administration and governance

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The PLATO Society is independent and self-governed. Its Board of Directors, elected annually to one-year terms by the membership, includes the president, other officers, and the heads of seven standing committees. Members perform nearly all operational tasks, including proposing SDGs, serving as coordinators, handling financial and facility matters, staffing the visitors' desk, and staffing committees that oversee development of SDGs, seek coordinators, handle SDG registration, develop Colloquia, and run noncurricular programs.[24]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f PLATO:SDGs; accessed August 22, 2019.
  2. ^ PLATO:Who We Are; accessed August 22, 2019.
  3. ^ a b Elizabeth L. Cless, with preface by Dean Leonard Freedman. Initiation and Development of the Plato Society, unpublished monograph, 1984, Section I: Genesis. Historian, The PLATO Society, Los Angeles, CA.
  4. ^ See list of all Road Scholar Lifelong Learning Institute Network Members.
  5. ^ See list of all Osher Lifelong Learning Institutes.
  6. ^ a b Nancy Merz Nordstrom and Jon F. Merz. Learning Later, Living Greater, Sentient Publications, Boulder, CO, 2006, pp.71-72.
  7. ^ a b Jim Verschueren, first director of EIN, as quoted in Nancy Merz Nordstrom and Jon F. Merz. Learning Later, Living Greater, Sentient Publications, Boulder, CO, 2006, pp.70-71.
  8. ^ Gertrude Rudnick, Historian. History of the PLATO Society of UCLA, September 11, 1983 to August 31, 1987, unpublished monograph, 1987, p.3: Elizabeth Cless and Nancy Wolfe, administrators during startup years, leave PLATO. Historian, The PLATO Society, Los Angeles, CA.
  9. ^ The PLATO Society of Los Angeles. "Past Presidents", Annual Meeting 2018-2019 Program, June 20, 2019, p.6.
  10. ^ Anne Pearson, president of ALIROW. "ALIROW and Elderhostel Institute Network Connect", ALIROW News, March 2004, p.2: "...our founder, Dr. Francis Meyers", available from www.archive.org for alirow.org, using year 2005.
  11. ^ Anne Pearson, president of ALIROW. "Twenty Years of Service", ALIROW News, March 2004, p.1, available from www.archive.org for alirow.org, using year 2005.
  12. ^ Elderhostel becomes Road Scholar; accessed August 22,2019.
  13. ^ How does Road Scholar partner with lifelong learning institutes? accessed August 22,2019.
  14. ^ Michelle Stiles, Interim Dean. Letter to PLATO Members, UCLA Extension, June 19, 2013. Historian, The PLATO Society, Los Angeles, CA.
  15. ^ Fred Goldberger, President, et.al. Report of Annual Meeting, The PLATO Society of Los Angeles, June 20, 2013. Historian, The PLATO Society, Los Angeles, CA.
  16. ^ Sam Pryor, President. "President's Message", The TOGA, May-June 2020, The PLATO Society of Los Angeles, June 2020. Historian, The PLATO Society, Los Angeles, CA.
  17. ^ a b c d Jodi Wilgoren. "Golden Years Now Bring New Emphasis on Learning", New York Times, December 26, 1999; subscriber accessed August 22, 2019.
  18. ^ PLATO:FAQs:If I travel frequently... accessed August 22, 2019.
  19. ^ Kathy Seal. "You're Never Too Old to Learn", Los Angeles Times, February 13, 1986; subscriber accessed August 22, 2019.
  20. ^ Hal Denner. "UCLA PLATO Society", Jewish Journal, August 24, 2000; accessed August 22, 2019.
  21. ^ PLATO:FAQs:What kind of discussion groups are there? accessed August 22, 2019.
  22. ^ PLATO:Colloquia; accessed August 22, 2019.
  23. ^ PLATO:Programs; accessed August 22, 2019.
  24. ^ PLATO:Governance:How We Operate; accessed August 22, 2019.