Making a real difference: 2017 aarp purpose prize winners

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Gabriela Hasbun Reid Cox with his wife, Serita, to his right, and foster-care youth from the iFoster program he created. En español | As CEO of AARP, I’m fortunate to see the incredible


impact that older adults have in all walks of life. Our visionary founder, Ethel Percy Andrus, set us on this road 60 years ago when, at age 74, she launched AARP to fulfill a “new image of


aging: growth in self, and service for all mankind.” In November, we recognized such age disruptors with the AARP Purpose Prize, an annual competition that presents $50,000 each to five


extraordinary people over 50 who have used their wisdom and experience to revitalize their lives and make the world a better place. Take Jim Farrin. Farrin, 81, set out to give prisoners the


one thing proven to lower recidivism: an education. His Petey Greene Program recruits college-student volunteers to tutor in prisons, jails and juvenile detention centers. Since its


inception, the program has helped thousands of inmates earn high school equivalency degrees. Another population that needed a hand is one you don’t hear much about. That’s because the


400,000-plus children in foster care are guarded by stringent privacy protections. Eager to open the lines of communication among foster families, caseworkers, agencies and businesses that


want to help, Reid Cox, 52, created the iFoster online portal. With a few clicks, foster families and children can get things such as help with homework and college applications, information


on getting free laptops and cellphones — and leads on jobs with the many businesses that participate in iFoster. Technology also opened Cynthia Barnett’s eyes to redressing the gender


imbalance in the science, technology, engineering and math workforce, which is heavily weighted toward men. The 74-year-old’s Amazing Girls Science program helps instill the love of science


in elementary and middle school girls with fun, hands-on camps and conferences. TWEET JO ANN Join me in the conversation about our 2017 AARP Purpose Prize award winners on Twitter, 


@JoAnn_Jenkins Mike Weaver wants to ignite a movement, too. Driven by a desire to unite generations, Weaver, 52, designed community-service road trips for teens, college students, parents


and retirees. Purpose Prize Winner Mike Weaver, founder of Weaver & Concerned Citizens of Aiken/Atlanta Now (WeCCAAN), Atlanta, Ga., is a former college professor who teaches the value


of public service by bringing teens and adults together for service-learning trips to communities in need. Weaver is also the recipient of the 2017 Andrus Award for Intergenerational


Excellence, named after AARP’s founder.   Then there’s Celeste Mergens, 55, who has tackled the rarely discussed global problem of the lack of affordable access to feminine hygiene products.


A mother of six and grandmother of 15, Mergens founded Days for Girls International in 2008. And since then it has provided 800,000 women and girls with reusable feminine hygiene kits,


while its microenterprise system empowers many women to pull themselves out of poverty. These Purpose Prize awardees are true role models. They remind us that a single determined individual


with a big heart and a great idea can be unstoppable in service for all mankind. _Jo Ann Jenkins is CEO of AARP._ ALSO OF INTEREST * Read more about the Purpose Prize Award and see the rest


of this year’s winners at 2017 AARP Purpose Prize Award Winners