Research Exercise
Accessing and interpreting census information
This assignment has two major objectives: To introduce an important
reference source on aging in American society (the Administration on Aging’s
Online Statistical Data on the Aging), and to put together an opportunity
to analyze and evaluate presentations of data that tacitly discuss the
joint impact of society on individuals and aging on society.
Some facts:
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Since the beginning of the 20th
century, life expectancy has increased in the developed world faster than
in all of recorded history prior to 1900.
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Thirty-five years of life were
been added to the average life span from the beginning to the end of the
century.
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At the beginning of the 20th
century, just above 4% of the proportion of the American population was
age 65 and older.
-
Today, in the United States,
over 34 million persons are 65 years of age or older, accounting for nearly
13% of the population.
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In the year 2030, their numbers
will more than double resulting in one in every five Americans being over
65.
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In other parts of the world,
16-18% are already 65+.
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By the year 2030, Japan is expected
to have twice as many old persons as children.
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What do these facts on aigng
mean? Do they say more about individual experiences or more about
a society and its changes? In this mini-research project, you are
first introduced to some of the available electronic resources that address
the demographics of aging. “Visit” several web sites on the demographics
of aging, “read” one site thoroughly, and then summarize your observations
with a two-to-three page analysis of the information presented. Your
brief paper presents your interpretation of some of the information you
found on the web. Your specific objective is to assess gender differences
in aging and what the differences mean. You are welcome to copy a
table from the web-page and paste and print it as an evidence of your argument
or as an addendum to your one-page "report."
The most inclusive census-based
web site is the Administration on Aging’s summary entitled Online
Statistical Data on the Aging. The page as links to many specific
reports.
You should select
the
Profile
of Older Americans: 2000, or
Health,
United States, 1999: Health and Aging Chartbook (read only pages
16-26), or
Older
Americans 2000: Key Indicators of Well-Being (select no more than two
dimensions), or
Sixty-Five
Plus In The United States.
.
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