Biographies from another era
Part of the homework in psychology 209 is creating the life histories of older adults.
One part of the homework during spring semester for junior Erin Coggin and sophomore Libby Huizenga was to create the life history of 鈥淎rt,鈥 an older adult living at Leonard Terrace apartments. In some ways, this was an easy assignment because Art had lived an eventful life. He had lived in San Francisco in the 1970s. He had seen the Beatles and Jimi Hendrix live. He had marched in a few protests and had sat out a few others. 鈥淗e talked about the prevalence of hippies a lot,鈥 Coggin recounted.
In another way, the life history assignment was a big challenge for the two majors. Art was functionally illiterate. 鈥淲e couldn鈥檛 use a lot of words in our book, so we used a lot of images,鈥 Coggin said.
On May 8, 2012, Coggins and Huizenga were waiting in the lobby of Leonard Terrace apartments to present their subjects with their finished life histories. With them sat the other student teams from 鈥淒evelopmental Psychology II: Adolescence and Adulthood,鈥 and nearby sat a table holding cookies and punch. Each team carried two copies of their subject鈥檚 life history: one to keep and one to give away. Gradually, the residents of Leonard Terrace joined the students in the lobby, and everyone huddled over the albums.
Two goals
The idea behind the project was twofold, said , the class' teacher: 鈥淥ne is to provide a service to these older adults.鈥 Pairs of students interviewed their subjects about events in their lives from birth up until the present day. They then found a way to represent that life in words and images. 鈥淪ome students will be incredibly creative and go to the scrapbooking store and make an elaborate album to present to this older adult,鈥 Yonker said.
The life-history project also has a pedagogical purpose, Yonker said: Through the assignment, her students learn about older adults from something other than a textbook: 鈥淔or them, older adulthood is very abstract,鈥 she said. 鈥淩eally, the only older adults they interact with and see on a regular basis are their parents.鈥
A wider horizon
For some students, the experience was a revelation. Freshman Chan Jang, sophomore Kristie Plantinga and junior Katie Dozeman undertook the life history of 84-year-old Martha Hall. Born in Mississippi, Hall was the mother of 17 children, 62 grandchildren and 76 great-grandchildren.
鈥淲e thought, 鈥楾hat鈥檚 possible?鈥欌 Plantinga said.
鈥淣o problem,鈥 said Hall, who sat next to her on the couch. She offered some advice on child-rearing: 鈥淵ou just have to have your rules, and don鈥檛 let them step out of line.鈥
鈥淢artha has all sorts of wisdom,鈥 Plantinga said, smiling. Hall was leafing through the highlights of her life. 鈥淭hey did a beautiful job,鈥 she said.
For other students, the job seemed impossible. One team told Yonkers they couldn鈥檛 tackle the story of their older adult. Abused as a child, he had left home young and was estranged from almost all of his family. 鈥淭he older adult said (he) would have liked to get a job in a factory, and the students thought that was so sad,鈥 Yonkers said. 鈥淚 told them, 鈥楤ut just look at what that person came from! 鈥 . That you could be a survivor was just an incredible thing to students.鈥
A wider world
The project widened the students鈥 view of the world. Sophomores Raquel Botero and Stephanie Bennett loved listening to 67-year-old Migdalys Brugal talk about her native Dominican Republic. 鈥淪he lived through the Dominican Revolution,鈥 said Botero. 鈥淪he was in her last year of high school. It made me feel that I was not aware of 鈥 the history of other countries. I didn鈥檛 even know that happened.鈥
Putting together Art鈥檚 life history similarly expanded Coggin's view of the world: 鈥淚t was a good experience for us because we鈥檙e definitely prone to the 鈥17c起草社区 bubble,鈥欌 she said. 鈥淗e鈥檚 not (from) that far away, and he鈥檚 had a very different experience.鈥 (Art did not appear at the celebration, and Coggin and Huizenga arranged to have his album鈥攃ontaining images of his favorite model car and his hometown of Norfolk, Va., circa 1950鈥攑resented to him later.)
鈥淚t made me think about the purpose of life,鈥 Huizenga said about the life-history assignment, 鈥渁nd why we go to school and form families.鈥
Yonker is happy about her students鈥 responses to the assignment: 鈥淚 actually had some students say, 鈥業 thought I wanted to work with kids, but I actually want to work with older adults.鈥欌 There was always a deeper purpose underlying the project鈥檚 pedagogical aims, she added: 鈥淚 told the students, 鈥榊ou are going to go out there, and you are going to honor these people.鈥