UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — When 52-year-old Renee Gibson receives her long-awaited Penn State degree on May 4, her 22-year-old daughter Clare will be there — and she’ll be in her own cap and gown.
Just a few hours before Renee receives her baccalaureate degree from the College of the Liberal Arts via Penn State World Campus, Clare will graduate from the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences with a degree in meteorology and atmospheric sciences with minors in climatology and geography.
Fulfilling a promise she quietly made to herself long before Clare — or her older brother Jacob — were born, Renee said she yearned to complete the degree she started at University Park in 1990 when she was just out of high school. And while time may have reframed her scholarly focus from civil engineering to the liberal arts, she’s making good on that promise and then some. Far surpassing her own expectations, the Harrisburg native will represent her classmates as the integrative social sciences major marshal during spring commencement — something she says she’s still shocked is happening.
“When I first got the notice that I was selected as a student marshal for academic excellence, I thought, ‘You’ve got to be kidding me.’ I even contacted one of my advisers to ask if it was real,” Renee said, laughing.
Unlike now, Renee found herself overwhelmed, anxious and “without the proper emotional tools to navigate college” during her initial time at Penn State, she said. She was placed on academic probation during her second year and made the decision to leave school shortly thereafter.
She had also recently met Kevin Gibson at a mutual friend’s party about that time, and just over a year later the two were married. Perhaps, she thought, school wasn’t in her plan.
“This has all been incredibly surreal. To have taken this long to get my degree and perform now the way I wish I could’ve performed then, it’s like I still don’t quite believe it’s going to happen. I’m extremely excited,” she said of her current Penn State experience.