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Texting workshop aims at closing generation gap

Media Release

9 August

In the build up to International Youth Day on 12 August, the Mental Health Foundation is urging people of all generations to connect with each other and foster appreciation.

The day signifies the beginning of the United Nations International Year of Youth. The theme for the year is 'Dialogue and mutual understanding', with the aim to encourage partnership between generations, as well as across cultures, and  to applaud the positive contribution that youth make to their communities.

In recognition of the year’s theme, the Foundation will be teaming up with Age Concern’s Manukau branch to run one of their popular texting workshops. This is an opportunity for youth to share their knowledge about texting and mobile phones with older people. 

“Many older people find communication technologies difficult to grasp. By having an opportunity to sit down with a technologically savvy younger person to explain how to use their mobile phones and, in particular, how to text, can be really helpful in terms of keeping them connected to their friends and family,” Judi Clements, Foundation Chief Executive, says.

So popular are these workshops that the one being run by Age Concern’s Manukau branch is already at capacity.

The Foundation’s youth mental health promotion team is challenging individuals and organisations to offer similar workshops in their region and to work towards making this year’s youth focus a national celebration. 

The volunteers, from as young as 10, have reported feeling a great sense of worth in giving their time to the older people, and they believe participants really valued their contribution and the connections they had made. 

Likewise the older participants have had many positive reactions from the workshops, ranging from feeling more confident in text language and in utilising communication technologies, to actually feeling safer in their communities.

Workshops like these have proven to not only benefit individual’s mental health and wellbeing but also entire communities, and research by the New Economics Foundation says “building reciprocity and mutual exchange – through giving and receiving – is the simplest and most fundamental way of building trust between people and creating positive social relationships and resilient communities.” 

 

Web Links

http://www.neweconomics.org/projects/five-ways-well-being

 

For Media Enquiries:

Martin Street

Senior Communications Officer

Mental Health Foundation

09 300 7028 / 021 790 236

martin "at" mentalhealth.org.nz

Top Page last updated: 9 August 2010