BOSTON, June 18 — Elderhostel, Inc. is pleased to award the 2007 Elderhostel K. Patricia Cross Doctoral Research Grant to Anna MacKay, a doctoral candidate at Washington University in St. Louis. This competitive $5,000 scholarship honors the work of Dr. K. Patricia Cross, former Elderhostel Board Member and Professor Emerita at the Graduate School of Education at the University of California, Berkeley. Elderhostel, a leader in the field of lifelong learning, is the world’s largest not-for-profit educational travel organization for adults.


Elderhostel awards this merit-based grant to a doctoral student studying education, psychology, gerontology, social work, or a related discipline, whose doctoral research will have a significant impact on the field of lifelong or later-life learning.

 

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MacKay earned her Bachelor of Arts degree from Brandeis University in Waltham, Mass., and a Master of Arts degree in psychology from Washington University in St. Louis. MacKay’s dissertation research is based on using attention-control training paradigms to enhance cognitive function in older adults.

“To study how we age, in my opinion, is to investigate the interface of a complex learning system that is accruing information over a lifetime while also negotiating life’s challenges,” says MacKay. “I am honored and grateful to receive this scholarship. It will allow me to complete my dissertation – my doctoral research is the first step of a research plan that aims to investigate the benefits of cognitive training in healthy older adults – and further expand my understanding of the relationships among age, cognition, and health.”

MacKay was selected as the Elderhostel K. Patricia Cross Doctoral Research Grant winner by a committee consisting of Catherine A. Hansman, former Chair of the Commission of Professors of Adult Education and Associate Professor of Adult Learning & Development at Cleveland State University; Sue C. Maes, Chair of the International Adult and Continuing Education Hall of Fame; Douglas A. Kleiber, Professor of Counseling & Human Development Services at the University of Georgia; Harry R. Moody, Director of Academic Affairs for AARP and former Chairman of the Elderhostel Board of Directors; and K. Patricia Cross herself.

“Elderhostel was founded on the idea that learning is important and enriching at every age,” says James Moses, president and CEO of Elderhostel. “We are pleased to offer this year’s grant to Anna MacKay as a researcher and contributor in the field of later-life learning and healthy aging.”

Elderhostel, founded in 1975, is the world’s largest not-for-profit educational travel organization for adults. Approximately 160,000 participants enroll in Elderhostel’s nearly 8,000 programs annually. Elderhostel provides exceptional learning adventures throughout the United States and Canada and in more than 90 countries around the world. In 2004, Elderhostel launched Road Scholar to meet the needs of a new generation of independent educational travelers. For more information, please visit www.elderhostel.org or www.roadscholar.org.




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