Elder Tutors

Community

Leadership

Resident-Directed Care

Grancare

Meadowood

Meadowlark Hills

Leelenau Memorial

Liberal Good Samaritan

Lyngblomsten Care Center

Chandler Hall

"New ideas and solutions need to be generated as the atmosphere, the needs and the wants of the residents change."

- Glenn Blacklock

Synopsis

The story of one elder, and his relationship with a student at the nearby gradeschool, illustrates how giving elders' opportunities to contribute to their community can enrich the lives of everyone involved.

Elder Tutors

Steven, a fourth grade student in Savanna, IL, was worried. He'd gotten a detention at school, and missed his weekly tutoring session with Bob. "Please don't tell Bob I got into trouble at school," he begged the Tutoring Coordinator, Jen Gos, "I'm afraid he'll be mad at me."

But Bob, an elder living at nearby Big Meadows nursing home, found out. He asked Steven at the next session why he didn't want him to know the reason why he had missed the session the week before. "I was afraid that you wouldn't like me anymore and would stop tutoring me," answered Steven.

"You don't worry about that. Everyone makes mistakes. I've thrown a few snowballs at recess in my time too. The important thing is that you learn from your mistakes," replied Bob.

Glenn Blacklock, Administrator at Big Meadows, chuckles as he tells the story about Steven and Bob. The unlikely pair were brought together by the nursing home's alliance with the Savanna Rotary Club's tutoring program, and their friendship has blossomed ever since.

Tutoring is just one of the home's many innovations that enable elders like Bob to play a vital role in their community, and one of the examples of the benefits possible when nursing home management, workers, elders and community cooperate in adhering to the principles of the Eden Alternative, a philosophy which embraces many of the concepts central to culture change.

Though Big Meadows has only been Eden certified for about a year, they adopted its principals about five years ago, making the home one of the first in the country to do so. "The whole Eden concept fit into the way we were already doing things," says Blacklock, "I guess that's why it has worked so well for us, and is why we have encountered so few problems along the way."

Big Meadows has had "excellent community support," and staff, families and management have been "completely behind" efforts to improve the quality of life for the elders, he adds. For example, funding for the tutoring program was obtained from Rotary International thru the Savanna Rotary Club. Local schools cooperate in identifying students for the program who need tutoring in math and reading, as well as advanced pupils who need additional challenges beyond their class work. A half-dozen elders from Big Meadows join with parents and volunteers to serve as tutors.

There are other venues to community involvement for elders who don't cotton to tutoring: Bible Camps, Bible study groups that meet at Big Meadows and involve residents with kids, and various outings where families and volunteers are invited to help out. Children from the community frequent the home to visit the pets as well as the residents, several have even "adopted" grandparents from among the elders that they spend extra time with.

At home, the residents participate in exercises, grooming and feeding the live-in pets, caring for the many plants, and leading intergenerational programs in addition to the other programs offered on a jam packed recreation calendar. "If we tried to take the animals out of here now, the residents would have my head on a platter, staff too" says Blacklock.

Currently residents are gearing up for the outdoor gardening season. Last year the Savanna Lions Club helped build a huge raised garden to add to the numerous outdoor garden areas at Big Meadows. A sidewalk was then poured around the garden to make easy access for wheel chairs.

This new approach to decision making, bottom-up management rather than top-down, has made a tremendous difference in attitudes and retention of staff. "When people know that their opinions and ideas mean something, morale improves," states Blacklock.

Of course there have been some glitches along the way. Big Meadows is now on their third dog in the last two years. The first two, a Greyhound and then a Chihuahua, had to go. Both dogs were successful in the facility for about a year's time, and then they began to get territorial. The third dog, a gun-shy Springer Spaniel named Molly, has been doing just great and is a big hit at the facility. Lucky for Big Meadows, hunting was not Molly's thing. A Hospice Social Worker that frequents Big Meadows then brought Molly to the facility. "Change is a part of life, and it is definitely a part of the Eden Alternative," adds Blacklock, "The life of an Eden facility is constantly evolving. New ideas and solutions need to be generated as the atmosphere, the needs and the wants of the residents change." Or, as Bob the tutor would say, the important thing is that we learn from our experience.