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Intergenerational learning programs bring together skipped generations (for instance, elders and young children) to promote expansive communication and identity options for participants, as well as the forging of relationships between generations. More specifically, these programs help foster multimodal literacy for both generations, encouraging new ways of seeing oneself and the world. Learning at the Ends of Life illustrates the unique benefits of these trail-blazing programs through more than seven years of research on developing and implementing intergenerational curricula in Canada and the United States.The first formal and sustained work on intergenerational curricula and literacies, Learning at the Ends of Life details the experiences of educators and participants in these programs. Rachel M. Heydon brings to life the particular possibilities of arts-based, multimodal curricula that draw on participants’ existing funds of knowledge and interests. Providing practical suggestions for pedagogies and curricula, Heydon helps educators rethink what is taken for granted in monogenerational learning sites and see new possibilities for learners and themselves.
Rachel M. Heydon is an associate professor in the Faculty of Education at Western University.
PrefaceChapter One: Introduction to Intergenerational Learning ProgramsChapter Two: Who Can Say What Is In My Heart? Illustrations of What Intergenerational Learning Programs Have Meant to Their ParticipantsChapter Three: The Making of Intergenerational Learning ProgramsChapter Four: Intergenerational Art Curricula and its Possibilities for Participants Communication and Identity OptionsChapter Five: The Possibilities of Curriculum: A Semiotic Chain in an Intergenerational ArtChapter Six: The Ends of Life: Death, Dying and Illness in Intergenerational Learning ProgramsChapter Seven: The Lessons of Intergenerational Learning ProgramsReferencesAppendices