What advice would you give young people to help them prepare for their old age?
Ithaca College Gerontology Institute
Instructions for Interview of Older Adult
Using the questions below, conduct an interview with a person at least 65 years of age. Feel free to add questions of your own whenever one occurs to you.
The report of your interview should meet the following criteria:
1. Typed and double-spaced if possible; if not possible, please write neatly in pen.
2. Include the questions in your report in a format that enables the reader to know what the
person you are interviewing is referring to.
3. Discuss your personal reaction to the interview in three paragraphs at the end of your report.
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Questions for Interview of an Older Adult
1. Please tell me about your childhood, family and school life.
2. Do you consider yourself old? At what ages (or stages) did you notice that you were getting older?
3. What is the most important historical event or period of time that you have lived through? How did it influence you personally?
4. What is the biggest change you have seen in how people conduct their everyday lives?
5. What have been the best years of your life so far? What are your plans for the future?
6. How are young people today different from when you were their age?
7. What advice would you give young people to help them prepare for their old age?
8. Have you ever experienced any negative attitudes or discrimination because of your age?
Please explain.
9. Student question. Based on what you’ve learned, ask at least one more question; what else would you like to know about this person’s life?
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After you describe the interview, discuss your reaction (three paragraphs).
1. What did you learn? Did anything surprise you?
2. How did you feel during the interview?
3. What changes (if any) have occurred in your perception of older adults? (What did you think before? What do you think now?
Historical Context
Before beginning the interview of their older friend, students need to familiarize
themselves with national events, trends, and presidents of the 1900s.
Important Events:
1900-1920
Development of big business
Development of transportation
Panama Canal
Airplane invented
One room schools
First automobiles
World War I in Europe
U.S. entry into World War I
Flu epidemic
Armistice Day
1920-1930
Women vote
Prohibition
Flappers
Progressive Era
Stock Market Crash
1930-1940
Great Depression
New Deal
Radio popular
1940-1950
Pearl Harbor
Draft and World War II
Atomic bomb
V-E Day and V-J Day
Cold war and anti-communism
1950-1960
Sputnik
Fear of nuclear war
TV becomes common appliance
Elvis Presley popular
1960-1970
Vietnam
Civil rights
Great Society Programs
John F. Kennedy assassinated
Martin Luther King assassinated
Neil Armstrong first man on moon (Apollo missions)
Beatles popular
1970-1980
Arab oil embargo
Inflation
Gas Shortage
Drug use more widespread
Computers become more common
Watergate
Richard M. Nixon resigns as President
1980-1990
John Lennon shot and killed
Bell telephone system divided into smaller companies
Sally Ride-first female astronaut
Space shuttle Challenger explodes
AIDS virus
Ruptured Exxon tanker spills oil
Texas elects first woman Governor since Reconstruction
1990-2000
Nelson Mandella-apartheid ends in South Africa
Persian Gulf crisis
East and West Germany reunited-Berlin Wall taken down
Soviet Union dissolved
First wave of “baby boomers” turns 50
2001-2003
Collapse of the World Trade Center in New York City
War with Iraq