Retirees seeking a second act turn to new adult education programs

Sue Blaney, 69, was wondering what might bring meaning and purpose to her life after retirement when she enrolled last year in a week-long workshop at the Modern Elder Academy (MEA) in Baja, Mexico.

“I didn't come home having solved all my personal questions, but I did come home inspired,” Blaney, who lives in Hudson, Mass., told Yahoo Finance.

The academy is one of a growing number of educational programs that have sprung up in the past few years from Notre Dame to the Modern Elder Academy to the University of Colorado designed to attract adult learners like Blaney seeking new chapters and personal growth.

Driving the trend: baby boomers retiring and looking for purposeful pivots. Some 10,000 Americans are turning 65 every day; the youngest boomers will turn 65 in 2029. That’s a lot of potential customers for such programs.

The beauty of it is that new research shows taking adult education courses and finding purpose are key ingredients for maintaining and even increasing mental acuity as we age.

Class at Modern Elder Academy, Baja, Mexico
Say no to brain drain: a class at Modern Elder Academy, Baja, Mexico (Photo Credit: Cliff Hackel) · Photo Credit: Cliff Hackel

Backpacks and books

We’re not talking about masters or degree programs, but rather classes and fellowships for students — those ranging in age from 50 to 75 — many of which have been launched at top universities through academic or year-long programs in recent years.

Campus-oriented fellowships, where students audit classes, attend lectures, and work on projects with graduate and undergraduate students, include the Stanford Distinguished Careers Institute, Harvard’s Advanced Leadership Initiative, the University of Notre Dame’s Inspired Leadership Initiative, and the University of Texas at Austin, which offers the Tower Fellows Program.

This fall, the Leadership and Society Initiative (LSI) will launch at the University of Chicago. The University of St Gallen in Switzerland will open its NEXT program in June. And the University of Oxford’s six-month Next Horizons program will open its classrooms next year.

Meanwhile, the University of Colorado-Denver launched its Change Makers program, a semester-long course, earlier this year.

“The idea is to have a framework for really valuing what you’ve done, the wisdom of your experience, and using that to discern what you want to do,” said Anne Button, the founding director. “Most of our fellows are retired or on the cusp and are looking to make a social impact.”

That's the case for Ellen Dumm, 68, who enrolled after a career in Colorado politics and public relations.

“I was looking at what's next, but I couldn't find anything substantial and meaningful that I thought fit me,” she told Yahoo Finance. “I've seen so many people just retire and not really have a plan other than the financial plan.”