Articles

One Community - Many Generations

"One Community-Many Generations" is an interactive community-assessment tool and planning process to build age-inclusive, livable communities and initiate community action plans.
Updated:
January 31, 2024

Many communities would like to engage citizens in a planning process, but do not have the knowledge, staffing, or expertise to develop assessments and capture information for use in a decision-making process. In order to help meet this need, Penn State Extension, through a grant from AARP, developed the "One Community – Many Generations" program.  This program assists communities with citizen engagement in an intergenerational planning and decision-making process.

As individuals grow apart in today's society, communities need to come together. Communities not only provide a geographic location where people live, they also offer social interaction and common ties that bind their people together. Ideally, these community features and related opportunities should be available to benefit all within a community. As a means of striving for livable inclusive communities, various types of plans can be created.

The process used in "One Community – Many Generations" is explained in an easy-to-follow guide and includes an online community assessment tool. The guide explains a four-step process a community can follow to engage citizens of all ages in a data-gathering event and an action-planning forum. The assessment tool gathers feedback on a variety of indicators aimed at improving livability in a community. Once data has been gathered, a summary report is provided and can be used to plan a Community Action Forum. The process includes semi-structured intergenerational conversations focused on identifying issues of common concern and working together to identify priority issues and create action plans for community improvement.

The basic materials for the program are available to community leaders and action groups at no cost thanks to support provided by AARP. Consultation and facilitation services are also available to participating communities. Communities that use this product are asked to complete an application, provide a brief explanation of how they plan to use the product, and agree to provide a brief report regarding the results of the program.

For more information on this program, please contact Neal Fogle at .

Professor, Intergenerational Programs and Aging
Expertise
  • Developing & evaluating intergenerational initiatives in diverse settings.
  • Training Extension educators and other professionals in intergenerational programming.
  • Establishing intergenerational strategies for civic engagement and environmental design.
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Extension Program Specialist, Community & Economic Development
Expertise
  • Community and Economic Development
  • Community and Landowner Opportunities and Challenges of Unconventional Shale Development
  • Community and Citizen Engagement
  • Strategic Visioning/Planning/Doing
  • Meeting Facilitation
  • Land Use Planning/Decision-Making
  • Community/Commercial District Revitalization
  • Placemaking/Place keeping
  • Intergenerational Living Communities
  • Local Governance Issues, Specifically Intergovernmental and Inter-Community Collaboration
  • Non-Profit Formation, Function, and Management
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Peter Wulfhorst, AICP
Former Extension Educator, Energy, Business & Community Vitality Programs Extension Team
Pennsylvania State University