October 8, 2008



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Impact Awards 2006 Honorees

Photos by Joshua Kessler, January & February 2006

There's a presumption in this country that people start to lose relevance around age 50. Let's hope our annual Impact Awards—celebrating 10 honorees who did something extraordinary to make the world a better place—will help deep-six the myth







Marylen Mann

Education Advocate

One measure of an idea's brilliance is how obvious it seems in retrospect. For example: the idea that older people can still learn and contribute to society? Well, duh. But when educator Marylen Mann, 68, started espousing this concept in the mid-1970s, it was far from a foregone conclusion. Senior centers in her hometown of St. Louis—and across the country—offered babyish, make-work activities, Mann recalls. In 1982 she and a friend, the late Margie Wolcott May, formed OASIS, an organization dedicated to providing challenging, meaningful pursuits for people over 50. "There was a lot of skepticism about whether the program would work," Mann says now. "Would people really sign up for an eight-week class in creative writing or biblical archaeology, or learn piano at this age? We didn't know." But the response was overwhelming, and the program has since expanded to serve more than 360,000 adults in 26 U.S. cities. Along with low-cost and free courses, OASIS has built an army of almost 6,000 literacy volunteers, who work one-on-one with schoolchildren across the country. And in 2001 the group launched a computer-training curriculum for people reentering the work force after retirement. "Every time we get an idea, people say, 'Do you think people are really going to do this?' " Mann laughs. "We say, 'You just haven't been around OASIS long enough.' " —Margaret Guroff

Meet our Impact Award winners from years past.