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[personal profile] geminigirl
So...mostly for those of you with good access to journal and lit searches...

I'm wondering (after a conversation this morning) if anyone has studied the aging out of professional health educators/youth workers.

The idea here is that people who work with youth and adolescents eventually become "too old" to do it-they lose their legitimacy with the youth they work with. I'm looking for stuff on median age, and on what individuals and agencies do to prepare the educators/workers for this. Also stuff on whether people leave jobs because of burnout, promotions, whatnot, and what kinds of things they go to do after.

(If not, I might have to do it...)

Date: 2003-04-03 11:29 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ruralrob.livejournal.com
Gee, now I'm starting to get an inferiority complex. As a sometimes AIDS educator who has worked with schoolkids - and prison inmates, for that matter - who are way younger than myself - your bringing up the legitimacy factor hits pretty close to home. And you have a point - the closer the audience can identify with you the better, and thats where I'm at a disadvantage. But I think a really good educator - whatever their age - is aware of that potential problem and can perhaps at least partly compensate for the age gap by good relating skills.

And of course, when I have to talk to the old geezers at the local service clubs - as I occasionally do - watch out! Coz I'm number one at that!

Fraid I'm not aware of any literature on this general subject though. Good luck with the search.

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