AARP Eye Center
Sync your smartphone or favorite tracker with AARP Rewards to earn points for hitting steps, swimming and cycling milestones Sync now.
That is a really good question and I will try to ponder it but do you have any sort of "abilities" ranking for the "Senior Housing Facilities" - there are many different types
For those who can - there are simple charades. The category can be as easy or as hard, as generalized or specific, as the crowd can muster.
What about paring up in smaller groups for a game of Concentration - matching items together.
Movement programs can be designed for those that can follow directions even those that must sit while performing -
When my Mom was in a Memory Care Unit - they would sit each resident that could hopefully participate around a solid big table and push a very light weight beach ball into play - residents would just knock it back and forth. This also helped the staff watch who was participating or not as a measurement of scale in each one's assessment.
When my Mom was in Independent Living - all kinds of crafts were done - they once made tissue paper flowers- some on stems and other just big - the staff placed them around the 12 floors of the complex for a specific time period.
It just all depends on the seniors, their independent abilities, their interest.
Sync your smartphone or favorite tracker with AARP Rewards to earn points for hitting steps, swimming and cycling milestones Sync now.