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Folder

General Documents

The General Documents series includes a variety historical and administrative files documenting the founding, administration and programs of the Institute of gerontology. Among the most important folders in the series is that containing Program Descriptions and Progress Reports. Here are several early statements of purpose for the IoG, definitions of the division of labor between the two universities, descriptions of the duties of the executive board, and early accounts of activities. (Other progress reports will be found in the Budget Requests and Supporting Documents series.) This folder, along with those of the Ad Hoc Committee and the earliest correspondence, give a good documentation of the origins of the institute. The Promotional and Informational Material folders--course and program descriptions, mostly--give an overview of some of the training programs, both short and long-term, of the IoG.

Collection

Institute of Gerontology (University of Michigan) Records, 1948-1987

28 linear feet — 1.7 GB (online)

Online
Interdisciplinary institute at the University of Michigan and Wayne State University for the study of aging. Records include administrative files relating to the activities, research, publications and conferences of the Institute's University of Michigan program; audio-visual material, and photographs.

The records of the Institute of Gerontology cover the period 1948 to 1987. They are composed of the office files of several staff members at the University of Michigan. (Not included are the records of that part of the IoG housed at Wayne State University.) Included are the scattered files of four of the institute's co-directors, the chairman of the Executive Board, the editor of the Occasional Papers series, the annual conference coordinators, and the directors of certain projects. Also included are correspondence and memos, financial information, grant proposals and reports, minutes, and printed matter. The programs for the Annual Conferences on Aging provide a "who's who" for many of the individuals represented in the collection.

The records provide an overview of the activities, policies, and personnel of the IoG from its inception. Some substantive and seminal memos and reports exist which throw light on the development of programs and on the value of certain projects. Most of the documents are routine, however, and serve primarily to introduce the researcher to the various units and activities of the institute. For details and insights into particular aspects of the IoG, the researcher should consult the separate collections of the various co-directors, directors of research, and project directors, as well as the institute's publications.