The Peterborough Examiner

Bridging the generation gap

Students in Michigan and Ohio retire to new homes

- MIKE HOUSEHOLDE­R

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. — Three Western Michigan University graduate students moved into their oncampus apartments at the beginning of the fall semester.

The campus on which they are living, though, is not Western Michigan’s. And their neighbours are not college students — at least they have not been for a long time.

Colett Chapp, Corey Youngs and Lori Johnson will spend 19 months alongside 80 senior citizens in a Grand Rapids, Michigan, retirement community as part of what is believed to be one of the first such research projects of its kind in the U.S.

The three will live at the Clark on Keller Lake facility for their entire time in Western’s occupation­al therapy graduate program. A research team will collect qualitativ­e data from the students, the senior residents and their families, as well as Clark staff, as part of the social and communicat­ion-based research project looking at the impact of isolation and loneliness, aging and stereotype­s of retirees by students and vice versa.

Chapp, 22, from Detroit, said the move-in last year was not without some initial uneasiness. “We went to the meals, but it’s kind of awkward to just sit down with somebody that you don’t know and just start eating with them,” Chapp said. “So, the first time that I felt like I was really relating to somebody was at poker.”

Chapp and David Burkholder, an 87-year-old retiree, became fast friends while doing battle at the poker table.

“I like her. She’s a very nice gal,” Burkholder said of Chapp after the pair, along with Youngs, Johnson and three other residents, finished up a card session.

The architects of the study said they hope that by the time the students move out in 2018, the experiment will have led to more effective intergener­ational communicat­ion — something that already has been establishe­d at a retirement community in Ohio.

A similar program is underway in that state, where students from the Cleveland Institute of Music and the Cleveland Institute of Art live among residents of the Judson Manor and Judson Park facilities. While the arrangemen­t in Cleveland isn’t tied to academic research, it features like-minded goals: reducing the social isolation often experience­d by the elderly and bridging the gap between young and old.

For retired art dealer Laura Berick, 81, the gap has been bridged.

“Here I came to Judson Manor, where there were young adults. And life sparkled,” Berick said after hosting violinist Tiffany Tieu, 27, for lunch at her apartment inside the historic former luxury highrise hotel.

Tieu, who recently moved out after three years to take a job with the National Opera of Chile, said she and Berick developed “a really special friendship.”

 ?? TONY DEJAK/AP ?? Ilona Engel Travis, left, and Rixiang (Ricky) Huang play ping-pong at Judson Manor in Cleveland.
TONY DEJAK/AP Ilona Engel Travis, left, and Rixiang (Ricky) Huang play ping-pong at Judson Manor in Cleveland.

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