Beatrix Niemeyer-Jensen

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Beatrix Niemeyer-Jensen (* 1957 in Bad Homburg vd Höhe ) is a German educationalist who specializes in promoting the disadvantaged , learning over a lifetime and Europe as an educational area.

Life and work

Beatrix Niemeyer-Jensen studied social work at the Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences. as well as pedagogy and sociology at the Johann Wolfgang Goethe University in Frankfurt am Main . After graduating as a social worker, she worked as an education officer in extracurricular youth education and youth association work. Her main focus was the international youth exchange. Beatrix Niemeyer-Jensen wrote her dissertation at the Johann Wolfgang Goethe University in Frankfurt / M. and received his doctorate in 1994 for Drn. Phil. With the work From the learned to the educated woman . From 1999 to 2010 she worked as a research assistant at the vocational training institute for work and technology at the University of Flensburg, where she set up the department for promoting the disadvantaged. In 2008 she completed her habilitation at the European University of Flensburg with the venia legendi "Educational Science with a Focus on Vocational Education". From 2008 to 2009 she represented the chair for rehabilitation education at the Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg . Since 2013 she has been Professor of Adult Education and Continuing Education at the European University of Flensburg. She heads the master's program “Education in Europe - Education in Europe”, established in 2014, and teaches and researches the transitions between education and working life in the life course and the connection between education and globalization.

Services

Beatrix Niemeyer-Jensen is co-editor of international journals on vocational training. She has been appointed a reviewer by the European Commission several times. She is a member of the German Society for Educational Science and the European Society for Research on the Education of Adults.

Fonts (selection)

  • From the learned to the educated woman. Diss. 1994
  • Promoting togetherness

Web links