(Press-News.org) The workshops, entitled 'Act your Age! Challenging Stereotypes', form part of the Economic and Social Research Council's (ESRC) Festival of Social Science 2011 and are organised by the University of Sheffield's New Dynamics of Ageing (NDA) research programme.
Sarah Howson and Charlotte Jones, who are co-ordinating the workshops, say: "Stereotyping in the media can lead to a negative understanding of older people. The workshop will use a variety of hands-on activities to help the children to consider their perceptions of older people. They will be asked to apply these ideas to their own lives and develop their self-awareness".
As encouraged in the Government's Personal Social Health and Economic Education guidelines, the workshop will provide the opportunity for children to engage both with older members of their local community and the programme's Older People's Reference Group. The older people will be invited to attend the workshop as participants, to explore and reflect on the issues of ageing alongside the children.
Through direct engagement with older people, the children will be encouraged to develop intergenerational relationships with members of the wider community and think collaboratively about ways of overcoming negative views of older people, as well as respecting their differences.
"The topic links in with several sections of the guidelines provided in the Key Stage 2 curriculum, such as exploring the ways that media present information and the ways that we understand people who are different from ourselves. In addition, it highlights key areas often neglected in children's social education. These issues have relevance in children's everyday interaction with others, as well as their own futures" says Sarah.
The participants will be asked to provide a list of positive and negative words to describe both older and younger people, followed by a 'getting to know you' session. Participants will use art and dressing up to express stereotypes of both age groups. The participants will examine how the media represent the ageing population in magazines, newspapers, commercials and TV shows and discuss how people are portrayed and the feelings this stirs up.
The participants will view photographs created by the NDA Project, 'Look at Me!' and discuss how the images challenge their preconceptions of ageing. To conclude the session, the first exercise of looking at positive and negative words will be repeated to see if there is any variation to opinions at the start of the session.
INFORMATION:
For further information contact:
Sarah Howson
Email: nda@sheffield.ac.uk
Telephone 0114 222 6490
ESRC Press Office:
Danielle Moore
Email: danielle.moore@esrc.ac.uk
Telephone 01793 413122
Jeanine Woolley
Email: jeanine.woolley@esrc.ac.uk
Telephone 01793 413119
NOTES FOR EDITORS
1. Act your age! Challenging stereotypes
Organiser: Sarah Howson and Charlotte Jones, New Dynamics of Ageing
Date: 4 November 2011 10.00-12.00
Venue: Prince Edward Primary School, Sheffield
Audience: Suitable for young children
For more information: Act your age! Challenging stereotypes
2. The New Dynamics of Ageing Programme is a seven year multidisciplinary research initiative with the ultimate aim of improving quality of life of older people. The programme is a unique collaboration between five UK Research Councils - ESRC, EPSRC, BBSRC, MRC and AHRC
3. The Festival of Social Science is run by the Economic and Social Research Council which runs from 29 October to 5 November 2011. With events from some of the country's leading social scientists, the Festival celebrates the very best of British social science research and how it influences our social, economic and political lives - both now and in the future. This year's Festival of Social Science has over 130 creative and exciting events aimed at encouraging businesses, charities, government agencies; and schools or college students to discuss, discover and debate topical social science issues. Press releases detailing some of the varied events are available at the Festival website. You can now follow updates from the Festival on twitter using #esrcfestival
4. Research Councils UK (RCUK) is the strategic partnership of the UK's seven Research Councils. We invest annually around £3 billion in research. Our focus is on excellence with impact. We nurture the highest quality research, as judged by international peer review, providing the UK with a competitive advantage. Global research requires that we sustain a diversity of funding approaches, fostering international collaborations, and providing access to the best facilities and infrastructure, and locating skilled researchers in stimulating environments. Our research achieves impact – the demonstrable contribution to society and the economy made by knowledge and skilled people. To deliver impact, researchers and businesses need to engage and collaborate with the public, business, government and charitable organisations. www.rcuk.ac.uk
END
CLEVELAND -- Results of the pivotal Phase 3 clinical trial published in the Nov. 3, 2011 (embargoed 5 pm ET, Nov. 2, '11) New England Journal of Medicine, find that the oral medication ivacaftor (VX-770) provides major, sustained improvement in lung function, growth and other signs and symptoms for cystic fibrosis (CF) patients. The multi-site study marks the first time a drug has been shown to work on the disease process rather than on the symptoms. CF, which has no cure, is the most common lethal genetic disease in Caucasians.
"Ivacaftor represents a significant advancement ...
Around 4,000 deaths could be prevented every year if the UK population adopted the average diet eaten in England, concludes research published in BMJ Open.
Death rates for cardiovascular disease and cancer are higher in Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland than they are in England, and it is well known that these diseases are associated with a poor diet that is high in saturated fats and salt and low in fibre, fruits and vegetables.
The researchers therefore looked at mortality data for coronary heart disease, stroke, and 10 cancers associated with diet, including ...
Disco Science is better than no music at all at helping to deliver the required number of chest compressions (CPR) to save a heart attack victim's life before s/he gets to hospital, reveals research published online in Emergency Medicine Journal.
But Disco Science, which featured in the soundtrack to Guy Ritchie's film Snatch in 2000, still doesn't improve the depth of compression, leading the authors to suggest that it's time to give up on trying to find the best musical track to aid the procedure.
The annual UK incidence of heart attacks occurring outside hospital ...
(Toronto – Nov. 3, 2011) – Men with locally advanced or high-risk prostate cancer who receive combined radiation and hormone therapy live longer and are less likely to die from their disease, shows clinical research led by radiation oncologists at the Princess Margaret Hospital (PMH) Cancer Program, University Health Network.
The findings are published online today in The Lancet (doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(11)61095-7). Principal investigator Padraig Warde, deputy head, PMH radiation medicine program, says: "The study shows combining radiation and hormone therapy improves ...
The timing, process and archeology of the peopling of Europe by early modern humans have been actively debated for more than a century. Reassessment of the anatomy and dating of a fragmentary upper jaw with three teeth from Kent's Cavern in southern England has shed new light on these issues.
Originally found in 1927, Kent's Cavern and its human fossil have been reassessed by an international team, including Erik Trinkaus, PhD, professor of anthropology in Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis, and the results published in Nature.
The Kent's Cavern human ...
Energy regulator, Ofgem, recently announced that the average duel gas and electricity bill is now GBP1,345 a year, and experts acknowledge that this figure can only go up. In addition, the trend of new-build properties coming with a gas fire as standard has been dealt a blow thanks to recent government regulations that demand increased efficiency.
Rather than sit and wait while the price of domestic oil, gas and electricity keep rising, the benefits of renewable energy sources have been recognised by many Irish consumers, with retailers such as Dalzells of Markethill ...
STANFORD, Calif. -- When given for hours as a continuous dose, the heart medication nitroglycerin backfires -- increasing the severity of subsequent heart attacks, according to a study of the compound in rats by researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine.
"Basically it's a cautionary tale," said professor of chemical and systems biology Daria Mochly-Rosen, PhD, senior author of the study that will be published Nov. 2 in Science Translational Medicine. "Here is a practice in medicine used for over 100 years. Nitroglycerin is so old that a proper clinical ...
A recent increase in the intensity of tropical cyclones in the Arabian Sea may be a side effect of increasing air pollution over the Indian sub-continent, a new multi-institutional study has found.
Traditionally, prevailing wind-shear patterns prevent cyclones in the Arabian Sea from becoming major storms. A paper appearing in the Nov. 3 issue of the journal Nature, however, suggests the weakening of the winds aloft has enabled the formation of stronger cyclones in recent years – including storms in 2007 and 2010 that were the first recorded storms ever to enter the Gulf ...
Pollution is making Arabian Sea cyclones more intense, according to a study in this week's issue of the journal Nature.
Traditionally, prevailing wind shear patterns prohibit cyclones in the Arabian Sea from becoming major storms.
The Nature paper suggests that weakening winds have enabled the formation of stronger cyclones in recent years -- including storms in 2007 and 2010 that were the first recorded storms to enter the Gulf of Oman.
Researchers note that weakening wind patterns during the last 30 years correspond with a buildup of aerosols in the atmosphere over ...
Josh Cote a successful business owner and entrepreneur will promote Global Entrepreneurship Week (GEW) to encourage many budding entrepreneurs to put plans in motion to start businesses and assist with developing work opportunities for others. Kauffman Foundation and Enterprise UK founded Global Entrepreneurship week in 2008 and signed Youth Business International to become the national host for 2011. Since beginning in 2008, Global Entrepreneurship Week has spread to 115 countries worldwide.
"The growth of GEW has been amazing. To think it started in 2004 and ...