UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — In the early 2000s, some students taking an online acoustic engineering course from Penn State wanted to show their appreciation to their professor for a great semester. They arranged to travel to State College, Pennsylvania, to surprise him.
“The students said to their professor, ‘We came to see you and thank you for everything you’ve done for us,’” said Jim Ryan, who was present for the surprise; Ryan is an administrator who led the launch of Penn State World Campus. “It was very special, and it was fascinating to me because it told me they had a very powerful educational experience."
That moment marked an important point in the early days of online learning: Students knew they could be successful as online learners.
This year marks 25 years since the launch of Penn State World Campus in 1998 with its first online courses. Those initial courses have expanded to more than 175 degree and certificate programs, and almost 34,000 students have graduated with a Penn State degree they earned online.
Most importantly, over that time, World Campus has solidified its place in the fabric of the University and has helped students find success thanks to this flexible way to learn.
The foundations of online learning at Penn State
In the 1990s, University leadership was exploring how to offer courses and entire degree programs using the latest advancement, the internet, according to Ryan, who retired in 2003 as the vice president for Penn State Outreach, then the administrative home of World Campus.
Several factors signaled the emerging demand: The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation was offering millions in grant funding to institutions to start online programs. The U.S. Armed Forces were investing heavily in video and computer technology for instruction. Executives in business and industry were welcoming this kind of learning because of the flexibility it provided employees to complete their courses.
A few departments or colleges at other universities began offering master’s degrees in engineering, though no university had fully committed to an online enterprise.
It was different at Penn State.
Through a grant from the AT&T Foundation, senior faculty members began developing a pedagogy of how to teach online. This was significant, Ryan said, because the movement had support from the whole University — not just those in one academic department.
Ryan said the University's leadership launched World Campus by leveraging the external funding and momentum within the institution. The first course was in turfgrass management, taught by faculty from the College of Agricultural Sciences, and other courses that opened later that spring semester included noise control engineering from the College of Engineering and geographic information systems from the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences.
Ryan said the University was committed to having full-time faculty teach so that the quality of the instruction students received matched that of a traditional classroom.
Early years and the initial growth
Turfgrass professor Al Turgeon was an early adopter and champion of online learning. He taught the first course of 13 students that opened the week of Jan. 19, 1998.
“We learned in the early days that online teaching is a little different from resident teaching and over time, through practice and experience, we learned how to optimize the online learning experience so that the education outcomes were identical to the resident program,” said Turgeon, who retired as a professor emeritus in 2011.
In the subsequent semesters, Penn State added new courses in acoustics, supply chain management, and nuclear engineering. The courses expanded into certificates and degree programs, giving students credentials for their achievements.
Within the first decade, the University launched more than 20 associate, bachelor’s and master’s degree programs. Students who wanted a Penn State degree but could not go to a campus had options in business, liberal arts, law and public policy, education, nursing and more.
Online learners lived throughout the U.S. and the world, even one who was working in Antarctica. It was clear that online learning had arrived and that students wanted a degree from such a renowned institution online.
Finding success and taking care of unfinished business
Shawna Begley-Peck dreamt of getting a diploma from Penn State, but she never saw herself as a classroom learner. That’s why Penn State World Campus was perfect for her — she had the flexibility of learning online and the prestige of earning a Penn State degree.
She enrolled in 2004 as a liberal arts major, taking courses part-time for six years while working and raising her son. Then, as many adult learners can relate to, life got in the way, and she took a break that ended up lasting 14 years.
Motivated by her son and her mother, Begley-Peck re-enrolled in 2021. She’s taking one course each semester while working full-time for a municipal parking department.
She is beyond proud: She got an A in her latest course and has received scholarships from World Campus that she said motivate her to succeed even more.
“I work, I go to school, I’m trying to show him that it can be done,” said Begley-Peck, who expects to graduate in 2024.