New Zealand needs to step up and be counted when it comes to valuing and pursuing adult education.
The very term makes many people cringe, conjuring up visions of classes in basket weaving, yoga and home baking.
It's not that people don't do things outside of work - New Zealanders are incredibly engaged in hobbies and sport in which a great deal of informal learning is taking place, but as a society that enthusiasm does not translate into wholesale support for classroom learning once we move beyond our early 20s.
It's quite different in many of the countries that we tend to compare ourselves with. While working in Denmark, for example, I was impressed by how continuous learning was credited with creating a highly skilled workforce as well as a strong Danish identity - ensuring its citizens could compete successfully with their brains on a continent where they are surrounded by people who are very good at what they do.
In Canada, I had the privilege of spending 15 years working in continuing education in Calgary, a city where one in three adults were undertaking some kind of formal learning outside of work. Rather than emptying out each weekend, there were hundreds of people in their 30s to 50s on the University of Calgary campus, pursuing their first degrees through the Weekend University.