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Toward Age-Friendly High Education: An Intergenerational Participatory Co-Design Approach

Objective: When aging becomes a global challenging, we believe it is timely important to equip aging knowledge among university students regardless of their disciplinary study subjects. This study aims to describe principles and process of development an aging-related curriculum in high education en...

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Autores principales: Vivian, W Q Lou, Woo, Esther, Pan, Nicol, Cobb, Peter J, Hu, Xiao, Cheng, Michael
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8679929/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igab046.2017
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author Vivian, W Q Lou
Woo, Esther
Pan, Nicol
Cobb, Peter J
Hu, Xiao
Cheng, Michael
author_facet Vivian, W Q Lou
Woo, Esther
Pan, Nicol
Cobb, Peter J
Hu, Xiao
Cheng, Michael
author_sort Vivian, W Q Lou
collection PubMed
description Objective: When aging becomes a global challenging, we believe it is timely important to equip aging knowledge among university students regardless of their disciplinary study subjects. This study aims to describe principles and process of development an aging-related curriculum in high education entitled “Intergenerational Participatory Co-design Project (IPCP)” and evaluate its impacts. Methodology: Guided by a key principle of involving participants of any learning context as co-creators of both the learning process and learning outcomes, IPCP went through four stages of development including capacity building, co-creation on learning objectives, deliberated content learning, and learning outcome dissemination. Mixed methodology including qualitative in-depth interview and quantitative questionnaire were applied in evaluation. A total of 26 participants, from three generations recruited from one university, one secondary school, and a pool of senior champions under a geron-infusion initiative participated. Findings: after attaining capacity building workshops applying Optimal Quality Intergeneration Interaction Framework, three learning groups formulated. A common theme “preserving cultural heritage” emerged, while each group has identified a specified focus (e.g., food, Tai Ji, and historic sites guide). Quotes collected and survey data revealed positive impacts in reducing stereotype and enhancing learning experiences. Conclusion: IPCP demonstrated good practices in role models in multi-disciplinary collaboration in pedagogy innovation. It also paved solid way towards a learning community interwoven with continuous innovation: IPCP becomes a pioneer contributor of library’s digital data hub solution; common core office starts to develop a human lifespan cluster; two research team members started new collaboration on geron-infusion in Faculty of Education.
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spelling pubmed-86799292021-12-17 Toward Age-Friendly High Education: An Intergenerational Participatory Co-Design Approach Vivian, W Q Lou Woo, Esther Pan, Nicol Cobb, Peter J Hu, Xiao Cheng, Michael Innov Aging Abstracts Objective: When aging becomes a global challenging, we believe it is timely important to equip aging knowledge among university students regardless of their disciplinary study subjects. This study aims to describe principles and process of development an aging-related curriculum in high education entitled “Intergenerational Participatory Co-design Project (IPCP)” and evaluate its impacts. Methodology: Guided by a key principle of involving participants of any learning context as co-creators of both the learning process and learning outcomes, IPCP went through four stages of development including capacity building, co-creation on learning objectives, deliberated content learning, and learning outcome dissemination. Mixed methodology including qualitative in-depth interview and quantitative questionnaire were applied in evaluation. A total of 26 participants, from three generations recruited from one university, one secondary school, and a pool of senior champions under a geron-infusion initiative participated. Findings: after attaining capacity building workshops applying Optimal Quality Intergeneration Interaction Framework, three learning groups formulated. A common theme “preserving cultural heritage” emerged, while each group has identified a specified focus (e.g., food, Tai Ji, and historic sites guide). Quotes collected and survey data revealed positive impacts in reducing stereotype and enhancing learning experiences. Conclusion: IPCP demonstrated good practices in role models in multi-disciplinary collaboration in pedagogy innovation. It also paved solid way towards a learning community interwoven with continuous innovation: IPCP becomes a pioneer contributor of library’s digital data hub solution; common core office starts to develop a human lifespan cluster; two research team members started new collaboration on geron-infusion in Faculty of Education. Oxford University Press 2021-12-17 /pmc/articles/PMC8679929/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igab046.2017 Text en © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) ), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstracts
Vivian, W Q Lou
Woo, Esther
Pan, Nicol
Cobb, Peter J
Hu, Xiao
Cheng, Michael
Toward Age-Friendly High Education: An Intergenerational Participatory Co-Design Approach
title Toward Age-Friendly High Education: An Intergenerational Participatory Co-Design Approach
title_full Toward Age-Friendly High Education: An Intergenerational Participatory Co-Design Approach
title_fullStr Toward Age-Friendly High Education: An Intergenerational Participatory Co-Design Approach
title_full_unstemmed Toward Age-Friendly High Education: An Intergenerational Participatory Co-Design Approach
title_short Toward Age-Friendly High Education: An Intergenerational Participatory Co-Design Approach
title_sort toward age-friendly high education: an intergenerational participatory co-design approach
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8679929/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igab046.2017
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