When graduate student Matt Isola鈥檚 family friend, Ted, received an iPad for his 90th birthday, Isola volunteered to show him how to use the tablet. The experience was a revelation for both.
鈥淚t was like I showed him magic,鈥 says Isola (MStratComm鈥18). 鈥淗is eyes lit up when I showed him FaceTime. He had no idea this was possible, and it took almost nothing for me to recreate his imagination of the world.鈥
Soon after, Isola developed an idea to replicate the experience on a larger scale.
For his thesis project, he launched the Generation Exchange Technology Workshop鈥攁 series of free, public workshops where seniors are paired with student volunteers who teach them technological tricks to live more connected, independent and fulfilling lives.
Last spring, about 40 seniors from the community attended the first three sessions, bringing with them a range of devices and concerns.
Retiree Jeffrey Peacock brought a laptop full of photos he wanted to sort and back up onto a hard drive. Working with alumnus Thomas Regur (Jour鈥14; MStratComm鈥17) made the task more manageable.
鈥淚 can talk to Thomas and he鈥檚 very patient,鈥 Peacock said. 鈥淚t really helps.鈥
Isola, who graduated in August, continues to host monthly workshops in partnership with the Strategic Communications Design master鈥檚 program.
鈥淥ur two generations fit perfectly together,鈥 he says. 鈥淲here one generation may gain concrete technological skills, the other can gain perspective on how the world works.鈥