The story of Elderhostel / Eugene S. Mills ; foreword by Rosalynn Carter.
Material type: TextPublication details: Hanover, N.H. : University Press of New England, �1993.Description: 1 online resource (xv, 197 pages) : illustrationsContent type:- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781611681758
- 1611681758
- 0585256977
- 9780585256979
- Elderhostels -- History
- Elderhostels -- United States -- History
- Universit�es du troisi�eme �age -- Histoire
- Universit�es du troisi�eme �age -- �Etats-Unis -- Histoire
- EDUCATION -- Adult & Continuing Education
- EDUCATION -- Non-Formal Education
- Elderhostels
- United States
- Seniorenstudium
- USA
- Education
- Social Sciences
- Education, Special Topics
- Geschichte 1975-1993
- 374/.01 20
- LC5457 .M55 1993eb
- digitized 2010 committed to preserve
Includes bibliographical references (pages 187-190) and index.
Print version record.
Foreword / Rosalynn Carter -- I. The Plot. 1. Prologue: Inside the Elderhostel Experience. 2. The Vision. 3. The First Summer. 4. Unsolicited Generosity. 5. Instant Momentum. 6. A Cause for Celebration. 7. The 1980s: A Decade of Expansion. 8. Elderhostel Today -- II. The Characters. 9. Six Elderhostelers: Portraits of Engagement. 10. Elderhostelers Write about Their Experiences. 11. Teaching Folks Who Simply Want to Know -- III. The Theme. 12. Elders in America: The Context for Success. 13. Elders Teaching Elders: The Institute Movement. 14. "The Strange Success of Elderhostel" -- Appendix: Elderhostel Board of Directors (as of March 4, 1992).
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From its headquarters in Boston, Elderhostel, Inc. administers an international network of educational programs for people over 60. In just over 15 years, Elderhostel has grown from a summer program for 220 in New Hampshire to a worldwide movement with some 236,000 participants a year in 50 countries - more than a thousandfold increase! The Story of Elderhostel chronicles this explosive growth and captures the contagious enthusiasm of half a million hostlers. Eugene Mills was president of the University of New Hampshire when Elderhostel was founded there in 1975. Since 1977 he has served on the Board of Directors of the organization. From this unique vantage point, he describes the program's inception and launch, and the overwhelming response it received from the outset. At a time when many older people were enjoying better health and financial security than ever before, Elderhostel was among the first to respond to their need for intellectual stimulation and adventure. In telling the Elderhostel story, Mills highlights the program's greatest asset: its people. An avid hosteler himself, he draws on his own adventures and interactions with fellow to bring participants the Elderhostel experience to vivid life. First-person accounts from hostlers, teachers, and administrators directly communicate their excitement and camaraderie. Mills describes a broad sample of domestic and international programs, conveying both the diversity of the offerings and the unity of the Elderhostel experience. Mills concludes by placing the Elderhostel phenomenon in the context of society's attitudes toward older citizens. In our youth-oriented culture, seniors have too often been undervalued or dismissed. But "the hundreds of thousands of Elderhostelers in programs around the world," Mills notes, "reflect a positive, motivated, participatory attitude that is a direct refutation of the American myth of the 'used-up elderly'"
Electronic reproduction. [S.l.] : HathiTrust Digital Library, 2010. MiAaHDL
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English.
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