Helping Adult Learners Find Their Passions, Finish Their Degrees
Adult undergraduate students come to us from a variety of circumstances. They are beginning or continuing their bachelor’s degree when they are older than the 18–24-year-old range that is typical for first-year, full-time college students. Many haven’t been in a classroom for years.
They are working full- or part-time, and many have children or care-taking responsibilities. They are successful professionals who had never needed a bachelor’s degree before, but got great jobs with a high school, technical, or an associate’s degree. Now, they need one for career advancement or to find a new job in the same field.
Here, 357 of the 1,982 undergraduates (20 percent) who enrolled in Fall 2015 were adults pursuing degrees online, through our partnership with Bunker Hill Community College in Charlestown, Massachusetts, and along side our traditional-age students in campus-based programs in Cambridge.
Many of our students are like you, sharing the same doubts about going back to school, but also having work and life experience that will contribute to academic success.
Jackie Geilfuss earned her Bachelor of Arts in Liberal Studies, a campus-based degree completion program, with a self-designed specialization in Sociology and Gender Studies. We talked to Jackie about her educational journey, and as she tells her story, she offers wisdom and encouragement to others who may be considering going back to school.
When did you start your college education, and how did you end up enrolling in a program here?
I started as a traditional student at a local state college, right out of high school. I spent six years exploring my passions, but I struggled to find one program that satisfied all of my interests. I changed my major multiple times and seemingly picked up a new minor each semester. I would take a semester off and then go back. I became a commuter, took classes part-time, and started working full-time.
After six years without much progress, I dropped out and gave up on my plans of getting a college degree. Then after several years away from school, a friend told me about Lesley’s Center for the Adult Learner. He had a similar story to mine, but there he was, back in college and thriving!
What challenges did you face as an adult learner and how did you overcome them?
The biggest challenge was balancing my work, personal life, and schoolwork. I didn’t have the same endurance for all-nighters like I did at 19. I couldn’t blow off commitments if I had schoolwork. I needed to plan my weeks and carve out time for essays and projects. To be successful, I needed to be intentional about my time and practice self care.