Engaging Seniors with Science Pays Civic Dividends
Drawing on the SPRY Foundation's "The Longevity Revolution:
How Science Centers Can Engage an Older America" conference held
in June 2006, the latest issue of Public Policy & Aging Report
(PP&AR) presents this event's key insights, outcomes, and resources.
In recent years, both the biological and social sciences have generated
remarkable insights centered on the cognitive and adaptive abilities of
older adults. Science centers (museums, aquariums planetariums, etc.)
provide an environment for older adults to incorporate science into their
lives, giving these seniors a set of new experiences and a chance to utilize
their skills. In an exciting application of these findings, PP&AR
illustrates how such facilities can work together with "the aging
network" (organizations funded principally by the Older Americans
Act) to benefit both themselves and today's diverse aging population.
Contributors Russell Morgan and David Ellis argue that science centers
can provide important intergenerational learning opportunities; Rich Browdie
shows how science centers and aging agencies can work together to overcome
stereotypes about each; Laura Carstensen reviews new information about
the workings of the aging brain; and Greg O'Neill and Linda Harootyan
make the case for making better use of a rising generation of older volunteers.
The issue also includes a number of short features highlighting innovative
science center programs.
This issue of PP&AR can be purchased at: http://www.agingsociety.org/.
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The National Academy
on an Aging Society is the policy institute of The
Gerontological Society of America, the oldest and largest national
multidisciplinary scientific organization devoted to the advancement of
gerontological research. Founded in 1945, GSA's membership includes some
5,000+ researchers, educators, practitioners, and other professionals
in the field of aging. The Society's principal missions are to promote
research and education in aging and to encourage the dissemination of
research results to other scientists, decision makers, and practitioners.
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