黑料正能量

Regular Undergrads: Old Approach Still Works, Too

August 9th, 2011

David Muscan

David Muscan '11 earned his nursing degree at age 36.

Adult learning at 黑料正能量 doesn鈥檛 begin and end with the Adult Degree Completion Program 鈥 older students regularly enroll in the university鈥檚 traditional undergraduate programs. Sometimes it鈥檚 because they鈥檙e after a particular degree not offered through ADCP. Or because they lack sufficient college-level credits (ADCP students must start the program with at least 60 semester hours of previously earned credit). Or because they鈥檙e simply interested and able to become fulltime students later in life.

It was all of these factors that put Keith Zimmerman 鈥10 back in the classroom. Zimmerman, who was 37 when he finished his degree in biochemistry, became a father at age 17, forcing him to put his college plans on hold. After supporting himself as a massage therapist for nearly a decade while his children were young, Zimmerman began at 黑料正能量 as a nursing student.

Before long, he switched gears to biochemistry after a general chemistry course rekindled his interest, dating back to junior high, in biomedical research. One of the highlights of his undergraduate career was a research project with biology professor Greta Ann Herin examining the NR1 and NR2b NMDA receptors (鈥渞eally fascinating鈥 stuff, Zimmerman claims).

Several months after finishing his senior year 鈥 also, as it happened, daughter Alyshia Zimmerman鈥檚 (class of 2013) first year at 黑料正能量 鈥 Zimmerman took a job as a research assistant in the Laurie Laboratory at the University of Virginia, where he鈥檚 exploring the use of the protein lacritin to treat dry eyes. 鈥淚鈥檓 finding this job extremely fulfilling,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his is the job that I鈥檝e wanted since the eighth grade.鈥

The college experience as an older student isn鈥檛 without its challenges. David Muscan 鈥11, who was 36 when he graduated with a nursing degree, said he sensed that professors sometimes had higher expectations of him than younger students. Muscan, originally from Romania, came to 黑料正能量 in 2007 from Hungary, where his work as a missionary for the previous decade had kept him too busy to finish college. Now working as a nurse at Rockingham Memorial Hospital, Muscan said that a few other older classmates made the non-traditional undergraduate experience seem easier, and that through his classes, he made close friends with students aged 18 to 50.

Forty years before Muscan finished, Wayne Lawton 鈥71 completed a non-traditional college career of his own. After a decade in ministry in various locations across the country, he landed as a pastor in Waynesboro, Virginia. Soon afterwards, in 1969, Lawton began at 黑料正能量. (Thanks to previous college classes, he only needed a little more than a year of classes to earn his degree.)

In an email sent to Crossroads Lawton recalled a time when he sheepishly approached a math professor for help with his studies. The professor, Wilmer Lehman, replied, 鈥淲hen you pastor a church, do you mind people coming to you for help?鈥 When Lawton said no, Lehman responded, 鈥淲ell, I don鈥檛 mind helping you.鈥

鈥淚 survived the course, and even passed,鈥 said Lawton, now pastor of Cedar Hill Community Church in Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania.

Lawton, who has taken occasional classes through Eastern Mennonite Seminary since finishing college, said he鈥檚 thought about capping his non-traditional education by finishing up his seminary degree, well into his seventies. 鈥淟ife isn鈥檛 over yet,鈥 he said, chuckling.