BGSU offers new master’s degree in gerontology

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BGSU gerontology director Dr. Nancy Orel with
new faculty member Dr. Patrick Doyle.

Every day, 10,000 people in the United States turn 65. This phenomenon began Jan. 1,
2011, and is predicted to last 19 years as the baby boomers age. At the same
time, people are living longer, creating a growing need for services, policies
and programs that help them remain healthy, active contributors to society.
To that end, Bowling Green State University is offering a new Master of Science in
Interdisciplinary Gerontology (MSIG) degree program. It is the only
interdisciplinary gerontology master’s program in the state and one of only two
master’s degrees specifically in gerontology offered by Ohio universities (Miami
University has the other).
The degree is designed to prepare professionals in a variety of fields to provide
services to older adults and their families, and as the basis for pursuit of a
doctoral degree. The program can be completed in one year attending full time,
or two years part time.
"Our focus is on helping people age successfully," said Dr. Nancy Orel,
director of BGSU’s gerontology program and MSIG graduate coordinator. The
benefits extend not only to the older population but to the community as well.
"Older adults tend to be the most vulnerable but also the most likely to
lend assistance to others," she noted.
With the number of older Americans doubling during the next 25 years, gerontology is
a promising career for those just starting out as well as for people who have
lost their jobs and need to reinvent themselves professionally, she added.
The program has broad appeal. It was approved by the Ohio Board of Regents in January
and already has a number of students enrolled, including an urban fire
department administrator concerned about the safety and needs of the elderly.
The oldest applicant is 67, Orel said.
Quantia Bates graduated from BGSU in May with a major in gerontology and a minor in
psychology. She will return to begin the MSIG program fall semester, with an eye
to combining both her interests.
"I am very interested in the mental health aspect of gerontology. Eventually I
would like to maybe be a gerontologist counselor for those who are mentally
ill," she said.
"Growing up I lived with my grandparents for the most part because my mom worked
nights. Being able to live under the same roof as them for about 10 years was a
great experience. I got love and attention from my parents but that from my
grandparents was something special," Bates said.
"I got to the see the good and the bad of aging, and although neither of my
grandparents is living now, I have respect for older adults. A lot of people
have a negative attitude toward older adults, but not me, because I was able to
grow up in an intergenerational household."
MSIG students will choose a concentration for their studies from four focal areas:
gerontology, human development and family studies; kinesiology; health
promotion; or social policy and administration. They will select a capstone
experience related to their goals.
"The whole field of gerontology is by nature interdisciplinary," Orel said.
BGSU’s master’s program is offered through the gerontology program in the
College of Health and Human Services, in collaboration with the Human Movement,
Sport and Leisure Studies; and Education and Human Development colleges.
Courses will include topics such as aging, physiology and exercise; families in later
life; public health administration, and communication disorders and aging.
Electives can come from sociology and psychology. Students will also be allowed
to take online courses in collaboration with the University of Toledo’s
certificate program in gerontology, and students enrolled in Toledo’s master of
public health and occupational therapy programs can take BGSU’s gerontology
courses as electives.
A 2008 article in Retooling for an Aging America, published by the Institute of
Medicine, called for all professions to recognize the increasing rate of older
adults and the advantages of obtaining advanced training for working with them.

The institute says only 1 percent of pharmacists and nurses and 4 percent of social
workers have any training in geriatrics, and yet a large number of the people
they deal with are older. "MSIG students will acquire specialized skills
for working with that segment of the population," Orel said.
"Any student can benefit from gerontology courses, whether to supplement their
knowledge in their own field – marketing majors who want to know how to reach
the older population, for example – or to deal with their own aging
parents."

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