Geauga Medical Center


University Hospitals Extended Care Campus      
12340 Bass Lake Road, Chardon, Ohio 44024     
Phone: 440-285-4040     

 

TimeSlips Training

An innovative and effective storytelling method that celebrates the creativity of people with dementia

TimeSlips helps people with dementia reaffirm their humanity and connect with staff, family and friends. Developed in 1998 by Anne Basting, PhD of the Center on Age and Community at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, the TimeSlips project has generated hundreds of stories, produced plays and art exhibits and rekindled the hope for human connection among people struggling with Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias.  Click here for more information on TimeSlips.

You can become certified as a facilitator in the TimeSlips method by attending an exciting half-day workshop, conducted by University Hospitals Extended Care Campus, focused on tapping the joy of creative expression. Facilitator certification is valid for three years and enables you to facilitate the method in your own organization or facility.

Who should attend?

This workshop is ideal for all levels of professional caregivers in any residential or community-based setting:

  • Creative administrators
  • Activity directors
  • Nursing assistants
  • Creative arts therapists

Participants will learn:

  • The TimeSlips storytelling method for people with dementia
  • The values and meaning of creative expression
  • Models for sharing the story with your community

Training dates for 2007:

Date
Location
Time
Cost
June 11 The Liberty, Arts and Celebration Room,
University Hospitals Extended Care Campus
9 a.m. - 4 p.m. $75*
Schedule subject to change

* Payment must be received seven (7) business days prior to the class date to secure a seat

Continuing Education: 4.0 CEU credits are available at extra charge; please contact Maryann Najpaver at the number below

Questions: Contact Maryann Najpaver, 440-285-7040, ext. 2212 or maryann.najpaver@UHhospitals.org

TimeSlips 
Using Creativity to Establish Connections

The group participants sit in a circle, intently studying photographs they hold in their hands. 

But the photographs are not ordinary, nor are these ordinary people.  They are engaged in a creative endeavor – working together to develop an honest, moving and sometimes funny narrative they will share with loved ones.

Welcome to TimeSlips, an innovative storytelling method that helps people with Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia reaffirm their humanity and connect with health care staff, family and friends.

During a typical TimeSlips session, a group of 10 to 12 people with dementia gather in a circle for about an hour and, with two or three facilitators, contemplate and respond to open-ended questions about photographs distributed to the participants.  The pictures themselves are usually staged, non-subtle images that provoke immediate comment – examples include a woman sitting on an ostrich or a nun sticking her head through the open sunroof of a vintage Volkswagen Beetle.

And that’s when the people with dementia start talking.

“These nuns are going to the fishing paradise town of Keewaskum, Wisconsin,” says one about the photo with the car.

“Sister Edista is standing up and Sister Sixtus is driving,” adds another.

“They prayed for the car they are driving now – but it's no good even though it hasn't broken down yet,” someone else suggests.

“They are also praying to find men...to convert that is,” says yet another.

Facilitators write these responses and more on a large sketch pad, occasionally reading the unfolding story back in order to revive the group’s focus and energy.  At the end of the hour, the group is left with a sense of joy and accomplishment, as well as a poignant, visceral and often inspirational story woven from the group’s responses.

After several weeks, stories can be gathered together into a homemade book and distributed to families and staff.

TimeSlips is now available to other organizations throughout Ohio, thanks to a collaborative effort between University Hospitals Extended Care Campus and the developers of TimeSlips.  The Extended Care Campus is a regional training base for the program, with experts in dementia care available to introduce, facilitate and provide instruction for TimeSlips methods to caregivers.

 

 

 

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