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Published on Nov 21, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

CHAPTER 13

THE ELDERLY
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LESSON GOALS

  • Explain what is meant by the "social construct of aging"
  • Describe & evaluate the various components of aging
  • Provide & discuss corss-cultural examples of aging
  • Describe social factors that affect the elderly population

SOCIAL CONSTRUCT
OF AGING

THE SOCIAL CONSTRUCT OF AGING:
Age and how people of a certain age are treated is a socially constructed belief that is different for every society.

EXAMPLES THAT DEMONSTRATE:
Tiwi tribe off the coast of Australia- they "cover up" their female elderly. Elder males make the decision

GERONTOCRACY: A society (or some other group) run by the elderly

Abkhasians of Georgia (Russia)- they have one of the longest life spans on the planet 100 + years and people their continue to be active members of their society.

Eskimo- Aging members do a voluntary death (put themselves on an iceflow) or leave their tribe, because they are not able to pull their own weight.

THE GRAYING
OF THE
GLOBE

THE GRAYING OF THE GLOBE:
Industrialization across the globe has caused for our world population to live longer lifespans. In short- people are living longer due to better conditions of living.

Chart on page 363

LIFE EXPECTANCY: The number of years that an aver person at any agae, including newborns, can expect to live

GRAYING OF AMERICA: Refers to the growing percentage of older people in the U.S. population

LIFE SPAN: The maximum length of life of a species; for humans, the longest that a human has ever lived.
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SYMBOLIC INTERACTIONIST PERSPCTIVE

SYMBOLIC INTERACTIONIST PERSPECTIVE:
How does your culture tell you that you are a certain age?

FOUR ASPECTS OF AGING THROUGH SYMBOLIC INTERACTIONIST:

BIOLOGY/PHYSICAL: Signs of old aging: wrinkles, baldling, aches and pains. However, these occur at different times for different poeple.

PERSONAL HISTORY/BIOGRAPHY: Life events that have an impact on the self-concept.

GENDER AGE: The relative value placed on men's and women's age.

TIMETABLES: The age at which your society/culture labels you as entering "old age"
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AGEISM

AGEISM: Prejudice, discrimination, and hostility directed against people because of their age; can be directed against any age group, including youth.

THE FUNCTIONALIST PERSPECTIVE

THE FUNCTIONALIST PERSPECTIVE: Analyzing how parts of society work together.

AGE COHORT: People born at roughly the same time who pass through the life course together

To help understand the functionalist perspective on aging we will look at three theories of retirment:

DISENGAGEMENT THOERY: The view that society prevents the disruption by having the elderly vacate (or disengage from) their positions of responsibility so the younger generation can step into their shoes.

ACTIVITY THEORY: The view that satisfaction during old age is related to a person's amount and quality of activity

CONTINUITY THEORY: The focus of this theory is how people adjust to retirement by continuing aspects of their earlier lives.

THE CONFLICT PERSPECTIVE

THE CONFLICT PERPESCTIVE: The idea that power and competition the main aspect of culture. This can be seen when looking at the aging population.

Examples:
Social Security- it was formed because their were competing interests groups for the resources of the jobs.

Intergenerational Conflict: The young saying the the elderly are taking too many resources (Social Security and Medicare)


DEPENDENCY RATIO: The number of workers required to support each dependent person- those 65 and older and those 15 and younger.
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ELDERLY & DEPENDENCY

Isolation & Gender: The elderly are as isolated as people believe (as a whole). Women experience the isolation of widowhood because they live longer.

Nursing Homes: Understaffed, Dehumanization and Death- Reference book for more information.

Elder Abuse: It takes many forms- physical, mental, neglect.

Elderly & Poverty: Elderly people no longer income in the same way they did when they were working- Social Security, Retirement, Savings...

DEATH & DYING

LANGUAGE OF DEATH: Linguistics show that we avoid the use of the word "death" and dying"

INDUSTRIALIZATION OF DEATH: Removed death/dying from our homes and made is a business

PROCESS OF DYING: The coping process of knowing you are going to die.
1. Denial
2. Anger
3. Negotiation
4. Depression
5. Acceptance

ADJUSTING TO DEATH: When death is expected it is easily adjusted to, when it is sudden it is harder.
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