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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
April
New program aims to keep seniors
mentally active and thriving
Craig Chamberlain,
News Editor
217-333-2894; cdchambe@uiuc.edu
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Kwame Ross |
| Senior
Odyssey participants, from left, Jean Sattazahn, Margaret
Rinkel, Mary Cornell, and Betty Towley, are keeping
their brains engaged. |
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4/18/05
CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. — Puzzles, brain-teasers, games and creative problem-solving.
For many, they’re a fun diversion, but could they also help keep
seniors mentally vibrant as they age?
One researcher, Elizabeth Stine-Morrow, thinks maybe they could, and
has been trying out her theory this school year with a new program called
Senior Odyssey.
More than 50 seniors, age 60-plus, have been participating. Their big
event comes April 23, with their first annual tournament.
Senior Odyssey is part of a two-year research study at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, a first attempt to apply the concepts
behind a program designed for the young, Odyssey of the Mind, to a new
audience of retirees. The funding comes from a $45,000 grant from the
National Institutes of Health.
Stine-Morrow, a professor of educational
psychology, has built her career studying how aging affects reading,
memory and learning. She was exposed to Odyssey of the Mind almost a
decade ago, when her son, then in fifth grade, got involved in the program,
and she signed up as a coach.
“It was just a really neat program,” Stine-Morrow said.
“I just thought some of the seniors participating in our research
would just love the kinds of things we were doing.”
The original program aims to develop creativity and problem-solving
skills in students from kindergarten through college, through both cooperative
team-oriented exercises and competitive events.
Stine-Morrow sought to develop a version that would cater to seniors,
help keep them mentally and socially active, and even delay certain
age-related declines.
“As a society, we put younger people in educational settings where
they’re always challenged, they’re always cooperating or
competing with other people to accomplish a goal, they’re always
having to work intellectually,” she said. “We generally
don’t afford that opportunity to older adults.”
Stine-Morrow ran a short pilot program last spring, then advertised
in the summer for participants in the current program, which has run
through the fall and spring. The participants were given a battery of
tests, then split up into small groups that would meet in weekly one-hour
sessions, each led by a student coach employed by the program.
One of those signing up to participate was Jean Sattazahn, who came
to the program after seeing an ad in the paper and then calling to check
it out. “I was told that it involved playing games – I love
games – and solving puzzles – I love doing that too,”
she said. She recruited a friend, Margaret Rinkel, to join her, and
the two have driven from their homes in Mahomet to the Illinois campus
every Tuesday for their weekly session.
For Rinkel, “the idea of creative problem-solving with a small
group drew me in,” she said. When she taught high school English,
she liked to design games to liven up the study of grammar.
Sattazahn and Rinkel were assigned to a group with Mary Cornell and
Betty Towley, both from Mattoon, and Judith Kutzko, from Urbana. They’ve
come to call themselves the “MENSA Blondes,” and have even
designed their own group T-shirts.
In the weekly sessions, the facilitator takes the group through a progression
of various brain-teasers, puzzles and word games designed to work different
abilities. In a warm-up exercise on a particular Tuesday morning, the
“Blondes” were asked to quickly think of unconventional
uses for objects such as an umbrella or a rolled-up sock.
Exercises that followed asked them to quickly think of associated words,
or to link two objects in a sentence. Later came word puzzle pictures,
and the group was seriously stumped for a while on “WBOEOADRS”
(bear in the woods).
For the big event on this particular morning, the student facilitator,
Stephanie Willis, supplied the group with four paper clips, two pieces
of yarn, two rubber bands, a sheet of paper and a cup filled with water.
The women then were asked to work as a team and use the odd assortment
to move the cup over a table while keeping their hands at a set distance.
After about 15 minutes, lots of head scratching and two or three failures,
they found their solution.
Kutzko said the problem-solving challenges like this one were among
the things she enjoyed about the weekly sessions. “I like thinking
‘outside the box’ to come up with a solution to something
I wouldn’t usually be doing,” she said. The math problems
she was not so crazy about.
The various groups or teams also have spent time every week working
on a long-term problem drawn from a list produced by Odyssey of the
Mind. They must present their solutions through performances, complete
with costumes and props, at the upcoming tournament. The teams will
be scored by a panel of judges, in this and another problem-solving
exercise, and cash prizes will be awarded to the winners.
Stine-Morrow doesn’t know yet whether Senior Odyssey is making
a measurable difference in the participants’ quality of life or
mental functioning. Tests and analysis, which also will include a control
group of about 20, will come when the program is over.
One potential drawback to that analysis may be that the program attracts
many seniors who already are engaged and active, “who are squeezing
this in between their golf game and their volunteering,” Stine-Morrow
said. As a result, any effects may be smaller or harder to measure,
she said. “The challenge for us is to bring in the couch potatoes.”
The Senior Odyssey Tournament is free and open to the public, and will
be held from 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. on April 23 at the Champaign Park District’s
Hays Center, 1311 W. Church St., Champaign. Anyone interested in participating
in next year’s Senior Odyssey program can call 217-244-7931 or
e-mail program coordinator Jeanine
Parisi.
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