Generation Gap
The generational gap is a term popularized in Western countries during the 1960s referring to differences between people of younger generations and their elders, especially between children and their parents.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhunO_CFlkfu0eg7V1jK7IoKQgUqI4veIVUyGXGF5MeATzE6yoGpplw2-U951SuHvdVlrrkUSpaJ8MKkDkceGM40BdQCO-UzrqSzYiwe_YDJOvh5dsXE-jxv1EP8weM5gwsdw09Bub2DZ6N/s320/alg_generation_gap.jpg)
However, sociologists also point to institutional age segregation as an important contributing factor to the generational divide. Those in childhood phases are segregated within educational institutions or child-care centers, parents are isolated within work-based domains, while older generations may be relegated to retirement homes, nursing homes, or senior day care centers. Social researchers see this kind of institutionally-based age segregation as a barrier to strong intergenerational relationships, social embeddedness, and generativity (the passing down of a positive legacy through mentoring and other cross-generational interactions).
Some interventions resulting from intergenerational research have proven successful in bridging the generation gap. Examples include multigenerational music groups, or programs bringing "bookend generations" (elders and preschoolers) together in intergenerational daycare centers where the elderly mentor the young. Researchers find that positive relationships built between unrelated children and elders in these settings tend to be generalized to relationships within the family at home.