UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Ron Gebhardtsbauer, a Penn State graduate and professor emeritus of actuarial science, said that he fell in love with Penn State the moment he stepped onto campus as a high school student. So much so, he applied only to Penn State and said he was relieved to receive an offer of admission.
That love affair would continue as a student and alumnus and through his “second career” as head of the Penn State Smeal College of Business’s actuarial science program. It would also lead him and his partner of 30 years — husband Greg Wright — to make a $1 million estate commitment to create the Ron Gebhardtsbauer and Greg Wright Scholarship with the hope of encouraging diversity in the actuarial science profession.
“I loved teaching, but I was always troubled to learn just how many of my students were graduating with significant debt,” Gebhardtsbauer said.
He and Wright want to encourage students to pursue actuarial science – a profession that uses mathematics, statistics, and financial theory to assess risk and uncertainty, primarily in insurance, pensions and other financial industries – without that burden.
Gebhardtsbauer said, “Whether they are choosing Smeal’s actuarial science program, with its focus on integrating actuarial studies with business disciplines, or the Eberly College of Science’s actuarial program, which takes a more mathematical and statistical approach, Greg and I wanted to help Penn State attract the type of high-achieving student for whom a scholarship offer can be the deciding factor between attending Penn State or another institution. If that student can contribute to the diversity of the profession, it’s even better.”
Although their gift is part of their estate plan, Gebhardtsbauer and Wright have chosen to “early activate” the scholarship, pledging an additional $50,000 over the next five years, to award the scholarship now.
“It’s important to Ron and me that we get to meet some of the students who will benefit from our gift while we are still living,” Wright said. “Early activation will allow us to do that.”
Corey C. Phelps, John and Karen Arnold Dean of Smeal, acknowledged that, with Smeal’s status as a Center of Actuarial Excellence, there’s strong demand for a Penn State degree in actuarial sciences.
“Ron was widely respected as a member of Smeal’s faculty and as head of our actuarial science program, and his commitment to students studying actuarial science was extraordinary. I have great admiration for his efforts to advance Penn State as a leading source of actuarial talent and to encourage diversity in the profession,” he said.
“That commitment is evident through Ron and Greg’s plan to establish a scholarship through their estate. Their gift will help ensure that an actuarial science degree is attainable for students from all socioeconomic groups, which is incredibly important to our land-grant mission here at Penn State. I am deeply grateful for their support.”