Sunday, September 27, 2015

Opportunities for a Lifetime of Learning

Like all Kendal affiliates, Kendal at Granville declares itself a supporter of lifelong learning. The ambition is grounded in the belief that any effort to transform the experience of aging must foreground the importance of being engaged with the world. No kind of engagement rivals education as a path toward enriched lives, widened curiosities, and enlarged hopes. So education is what Kendal encourages.

My mind was turned to these sorts of thoughts as I reflected on how so many of my friends and I are seizing upon the opportunities that are available to us by virtue of living right here in Granville.

First of all, there's Denison University. Our partner in many activities, Denison welcomes senior citizens into its classrooms and laboratories. Denison has long sought to be a welcoming neighbor to Granville residents who want to get back into the classroom after lives and careers in fields as diverse as the clergy and the military, medicine and homemaking, farming and the law. One of my friends is enrolled in a German class because he wants to visit and talk with relatives in Europe. Another took a class in classical and medieval philosophy because he was curious about natural law teaching. A third has taken so many classes in the studio art department that she has been allowed to offer a pottery course to Kendal residents, using the University's studio facility.

In the recent past I know of Denison classes taken in art history, earth science, English poetry, the history of Islam, macroeconomics, music theory, and the Old and New Testaments. So far as I know, in every instance the senior enrollee has come away from the experience of reentry into the classroom exhilarated by the subject and delighted by the chance to talk with the young women and men who attend Denison.

But Denison isn't our only source of opportunities. The Lifelong Learning Institute, operating under the sponsorship of the Central Ohio Technical College, is offering a rich array of courses this fall, and – switching completely to personal experience now – I have found four that I'm signed up for. The first, just wrapped up, was a humdinger – "The Civil Rights Movement and Black Power." Our instructor teaches at OSU, Columbus, and thanks to her well-organized presentations I now have a much better understanding of the sequence and meaning of various tumultuous events which occurred during my lifetime but which had all become rather muddled in my mind. 

I'll soon be taking a course with the provocative title of "Beethoven and Berlioz did WHAT?!?" It is designed to be a "light-hearted" classroom experience, and our instructor is a conductor, composer, and arranger affiliated with Muskingum University. Sounds good to me!

Next in line will come a course on the Cold War. It's another of these large historical moments that I lived through but need instruction on. Our guide will be an award-winning emeritus professor from Miami University, who has written widely on the subject.

Finally, in an effort to guard myself against terminal fuddy-duddiness, I've signed up for "Introduction to Facebook." Almost every week I have an occasion to feel embarrassed by what I don't know about my Facebook account, and so I hope to begin to remedy my ignorance. Our instructor is a retired trainer for JP Morgan Chase, and I'm treating this course as my "Facebook for Dummies" experience.

There's much else on offer from the Lifelong Learning Institute – a POW's story, for example, or a tour of Union Cemetery in Columbus, or the history of Columbus aviation. My point, however, is broader: Kendal takes seriously its commitment to fostering lifelong learning, and our happy proximity to Columbus and Granville – to Denison, COTC, and two branches of The Ohio State University – allows the community to connect with an array of educational opportunities. It's another of the benefits of living at Kendal.