Bridging Gerontology & the Visual Arts: A Multicomponent Program With Undergraduate Students
Brian Carpenter, Maria Elisa Aguilo

TL;DR
This program combined gerontology and visual arts to change students' views on aging and creativity through lectures, artist panels, and museum visits.
Contribution
An innovative interdisciplinary program that challenges ageist beliefs by integrating gerontology and the visual arts.
Findings
Students' perception of the peak age for creativity increased from 33.8 to 44.5 years old after program components.
Student ratings of older adults as 'innovative' significantly increased following the program.
Abstract
This session describes a program that bridged gerontology and the visual arts by exposing undergraduate students to older artists and their creative output. The program was one component in a semester-long, introductory interdisciplinary course on aging for first-year students. The program consisted of several elements, including an introductory lecture on creativity across the lifespan; a panel discussion in class with three older professional artists; a visit to a curated museum exhibition featuring works created later in life by Picasso, Miro, Chagall, and Calder, among others; and an assignment that asked students to research a visual artist and reflect on their creativity over their career. A rigorous program evaluation documented the program’s impact on the students. As examples of findings, among the 73 students who participated, their perception of the age at which creativity…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAging and Gerontology Research · Creativity in Education and Neuroscience · Technology Use by Older Adults
