When children meet people living with dementia, only smiles happen
There's an exciting partnership that hopefully should spread where school children meet older people living with dementia.
16 children are taking part in an intergenerational program at Club Kalina, Community Home Australia's inclusive day centre located in Greenway ACT that welcomes people of all ages and abilities.
The children are working with seniors living with dementia and other disabilities, to lovingly restore and rehome furniture.
"We see this as an opportunity for our students to demonstrate empathy, embrace diversity and grow as people and not just learners," Bonython Primary School Team Leader for year 5 & 6, Marissa Owens, told ABC News.
"They thoroughly enjoy coming and the excitement levels on the bus on the way are always high.
"It is certainly something they look forward to each and every week."
The furniture restoration initiative is designed to help reduce social isolation among seniors and break stigma around dementia.
"There is a big stigma in society [that] people with dementia should be feared or that we don't have anything to learn from them," said Community Home Australia's Rhiannon Toohey, the Grants and Research Coordinator.
"That is just not the case at all. We have so much to learn from people with dementia.
"They have such huge hearts and knowledge and if you just take the time and patience to listen, watch and learn you will pick up something special."
Rhiannon is studying the attitudes of the students involved towards people living with dementia.
She's also evaluating interactions between the students and the people living with dementia, to see how connections are built and how they progress over time.
"The kids [have been] really receptive to the idea of becoming friends with someone with dementia," she said.