Methods: A survey of 93 art event attendees was conducted immediately after 16 sessions of the event (78% response rate). Respondents reported on their event experience and its impact on their understandings of older adults and attitudes towards ageing. Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) used to test for differences between age groups (18-34, 35-64 and 65+ years).
Results: Over 90% of attendees reported the art event helped them develop an understanding of the lives of older people, with the greatest impact on young and middle-aged adults. The majority of young and middle-aged adults, however, expressed concern about their own ageing.
Conclusion: Results suggest that intergenerational art events have the potential to increase understandings of older adults and their lives, but this may not translate into personalised comfort with ageing. (Cook, Vreugdenhil & Macnish, 2018)
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- Cook, P. S., Vreugdenhil, A. & Macnish, B. (2018). Confronting ageism: The potential of intergenerational contemporary art events to increase understanding of older adults and ageing. Australasian Journal on Ageing, link
- photograph by Steven Edson (1975) via
This is so important, thank you.
ReplyDeleteIt very much is. And so complex. Many thanks, Macy!
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