EDUC 210 Lecture Notes - Lecture 1: Millennials, Disengagement Theory, Baby Boomers

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Life cycle is a better predictor of participation in leisure than age: whether a person is 18, 25, or 33 years old does not matter as much as where a person is in their own life cycle. A 25-year-old first-time parent is likely to have much more in common with a 38-year-old first-time parent than with a 25-year- old college student. 55 or 65, adjustment to retirement is likely to be similar. Full-time university students are also similar to each other, whether they are 18 or 28: of course, there are exceptions, but this is an important factor in making assumptions about an individual"s leisure activities. At different life stages, leisure fulfills different social functions. Leisure includes a very high percentage of couples only" activites. Graphs on the following slides: variations in constraints by age, leisure participation over the lifespan. Leisure stimulates and eases the transitions of change, yet remains constant throughout life.

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