What happens when a nursing home and a day care center share a roof? - YouTube

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JUDY WOODRUFF: A new report due out later this week from the National Institute on Early
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Education Research finds that a number of states are struggling to find ways to improve
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access to high quality pre-kindergarten.
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Tonight, we look at a unique approach taken by a preschool in Seattle, Washington.
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It's giving children life lessons that go beyond the classroom, and providing a unique
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opportunity to seniors.
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Special correspondent Cat Wise has our report.
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It's part of our Making the Grade series on education that airs every Tuesdays.
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MARY MCGOVERN, Senior Citizen: What do you see?
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CHILD: A brown bear.
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CHILD: A brown bear.
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CAT WISE: Mary McGovern is 95 years old, and one of her favorite things to do is read to
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toddlers.
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MARY MCGOVERN: And what is that?
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A bird.
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CHILD: A bird.
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MARY MCGOVERN: A bird.
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What color is the bird?
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CHILDREN: Red.
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MARY MCGOVERN: Red.
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Everybody knows that.
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CAT WISE: Luckily for Mary, she doesn't need to go any further than down the hall to find
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her young friends.
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MARY MCGOVERN: Oh, see, look in here is the little kids in there.
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CAT WISE: Oh, yes.
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McGovern lives at Providence Mount St. Vincent, a nursing home in Seattle, Washington, that
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also houses a day care for children up to 5 years of age.
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WOMAN: Thank you, honey.
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Thank you.
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There you go.
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Thank you very much.
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CAT WISE: Every weekday, 500 residents are joined by 125 children in the facility affectionately
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called The Mount.
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MAN: Peekaboo.
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WOMAN: Peekaboo.
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MAN: I see you.
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Administrator Charlene Boyd:
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CHARLENE BOYD, Regional Administrator, Providence Mount St. Vincent: We wanted to create a place
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for people to come to live, and not come to die.
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CAT WISE: So, in 1991, Boyd and other administrators added a high-quality preschool to the nursing
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home and created an intergenerational learning center, a community for the very old and very
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young.
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Why is there is this railing here?
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CHARLENE BOYD: This railing is here not for the kids, but it's here for residents.
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And it's a safety piece for a resident in a wheelchair to push themselves up and to
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hold on and to bring themselves to a standing position and watch the children through the
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window.
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CAT WISE: So, they can stand here and look in?
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CHARLENE BOYD: They can stand here and look in.
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It's putting high-quality child care in a setting that link old and young together,
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making the magic between these two ages together, bringing joy to the residents and joy to those
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young children.
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It's just like this magical formula that happens every day.
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WOMAN: Can I get a high-five?
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There.
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He knows how to do a high-five.
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MARY MCGOVERN: Most of them, they're curious about me.
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Why are you here?
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I tell them I'm here because, when I was living in my house, when I got too old, I wasn't
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always walking straight, and sometimes I would fall.
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And if fell, I had to have some help to get up, because I couldn't get off the floor.
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I want to hug your baby doll.
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MAUREEN MCGOVERN, Daughter of Mary McGovern: I think there are things that both parties
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take away from the interactions.
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It's not like a lifelong relationship, but just for that moment in time, they're both
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enjoying each other's company, and getting something out of their relationship with that
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person in that moment.
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MARY MCGOVERN: Give me a hug.
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Come on.
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CHARLENE BOYD: All of us have common needs to be recognized.
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All of us have common needs to be loved, and all of us have common needs to share life
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together.
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And so these children bring life and vibrancy and normalcy.
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It's a gift.
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It's a gift in exposing young families to positive aspects of aging, and it's a gift
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of also having children seeing frailty, normalcy and that's part of that full circle of life.
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(SINGING)
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CAT WISE: Intergenerational activities can be spontaneous or planned, like this sing-a-long.
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MARIE HOOVER, Providence Mount St. Vincent: There's 36 visit possible each week, so each
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classroom, six classrooms, has at least three visits, up to six visits.
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CAT WISE: The director of the center, Marie Hoover, says children become comfortable with
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elderly residents at an early age.
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MARIE HOOVER: Whether they're in a wheelchair, or in a walker, or maybe they're hard to understand,
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or you have to speak louder, it is just about who that individual is, and they adjust.
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The kids just don't -- they really don't blink an eye.
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This is normal.
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This is just who this resident is.
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CAT WISE: Ninety-three-year-old Harriet Thompson joined this sing-a-long on her way to the
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dining hall.
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HARRIET THOMPSON, Senior Citizen: I usually like to go sit down for a while before dinner,
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but I heard them singing, so in, we went.
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CAT WISE: What do you experience internally when you're around these children?
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HARRIET THOMPSON: Happiness, just plain old happiness.
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You know, yes, it beats anything else.
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Beats television.
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CHARLENE BOYD: Boredom and loneliness at sort of the plagues of older adults.
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There's nothing more delightful than seeing young children with noise, with laughter.
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You see the residents, and they hear the sound of the kids coming down the hall, and it's
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as though sunlight just came through the window.
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HARRIET THOMPSON: I'm a great-great-grandmother, but they're in another town.
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I can't hold my own little girl because she's far away.
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And so this is what makes me happy.
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You get to know them, and watch them, and act silly with them.
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And it's good to feel like you're 3 years old again.
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CAT WISE: Teachers see similarities in the ways these two very different age groups communicate.
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MARIE HOOVER: The brain of a toddler, and as somebody is beginning to have, you know,
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some signs of dementia, the brains are similar, and their development, or their decline, is
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similar.
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CAT WISE: That was apparent in this art class, where resident John Goss, a retired surgeon,
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and 5-year-old William Kraynek (ph) teamed up as painting partners.
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JOHN GOSS, Senior Citizen: This is a junk brush?
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CHILD: A giant.
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JOHN GOSS: Giant, yes.
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He's operating on my plain, and I'm operating on his plain, and so we have an attachment.
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He helped me, and we were working together.
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CHILD: I used blue, and he used blue, and I used green, and he used green.
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JOHN GOSS: It's wonderfully fun, because things come out of your hand, rather than your mouth.
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MARIE HOOVER: The kids are certainly of that age where this there isn't this sense of,
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oh, that's weird or something to be scared of, and I think that's happening on both sides
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of the age.
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CHILD: What's your name?
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ANNIE CARTER, Senior Citizen: Annie Carter.
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CAT WISE: Later the same day, William Kraynek visited the skilled nursing section of The
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Mount to help make sandwiches for the homeless.
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CHILD: I had three sandwiches.
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ANNIE CARTER: Oh, I see.
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CAT WISE: Here, William partnered with 92-year-old Annie Carter.
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ANNIE CARTER: We just talk about our work, just like anybody else on a job.
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That's our job, so we have to do the right thing.
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WOMAN: This is Alex.
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Hi, Alex.
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MAN: How you doing?
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WOMAN: Hi.
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CAT WISE: How do the children deal with difficult situations, like a resident that might be
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declining or even death?
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How do the children deal with those situations?
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MARIE HOOVER: Developmentally, it's not really something they can conceptualize.
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Even our oldest kids, at 5, kids don't quite get that whole death concept.
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If the kids bring that up to the teachers, then the teacher's response is going to be,
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I miss Mary too.
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What's your favorite memory about what she did?
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And those are the kinds of things they're going to focus in on, as opposed to somebody
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died.
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They're just not quite ready to get that concept.
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CAT WISE: Child care at The Mount is competitively priced with similar high quality preschools
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in the area.
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Currently, 400 families are on the wait list.
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Administrators believe The Mount's model can be replicated across the country, and they
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expect interest to peak this summer, when a documentary featuring their work called
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"Present Perfect" is released.
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For the "PBS NewsHour," I'm Cat Wise in Seattle.