PIAM: A Space for Lifelong Learning
The Programa Institucional para la Persona Adulta y Adulta Mayor (PIAM, Institutional Program for Adults and Older Adults) was founded in 1986 and is part of the University of Costa Rica, the country's main public university. It is an informal education program for people over 50 years old. Since its inception, PIAM has aimed to foster lifelong learning and the development of intergenerational relationships by incorporating students of older age in university classrooms.15
PIAM currently offers courses under two modalities. The first refers to courses offered to matriculating students by the university where younger students share classrooms with students of other generations. By contrast, additional courses are exclusively offered to individuals over the age of 50. These 50+ specific courses are divided into eight modules: art and culture, handicrafts, general knowledge, healthy lifestyles, artistic groups, languages, human movement, and information and communication technologies. Participation in either type of course does not lead to a degree.16
In addition to offering courses, PIAM advises research projects focused on aging and educational gerontology and trains the university’s professors to utilize an age-inclusive teaching approach. This has been a pioneer program in education for seniors in Latin America, and it has connected with multiple networks at the international level, including the International Association of Universities of the Third Age (AIUTA in French) and the Ibero-American Network of University Programs with Older Adults (RIPUAM in Spanish).16
Given the expected growth of Costa Rica’s aging population in the coming years, it will remain imperative to continue PIAM, the normalization of aging as part of the life course, the promotion of healthy aging, and, above all, continuous and meaningful learning opportunities for older adults as central drivers of transforming society. ●