Fulfill Your Love of Lifelong Learning
Staff and faculty are invited to join the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute for access to in-person and virtual courses
Since the pandemic has eased, OLLI, which is celebrating its 45th anniversary this year, has reintroduced in-person courses but has kept virtual offerings that had not been offered before COVID-19.
Several of OLLI鈥檚 most are recorded and can be accessed within 48 hours of the course session. These sessions include 鈥淔rank Lloyd Wright: The Man and His Architecture;鈥 鈥淐urrent Economic Policy Issues;鈥 and 鈥淣orth Carolina Folk Music: A History.鈥
Virtual courses have allowed instructors such as Jon Seskevich, a retired registered nurse who lives in California but helped create Duke Hospital's Stress Management Consult Team, stay in touch with campus.
鈥淭eaching reconnects me with Duke, both the people who I worked with at Duke and patients,鈥 said Seskevich, who worked at Duke for 31 years. 鈥淪ome people I met through my nursing career have taken my online classes and we stay in touch this way.鈥
Betsy Dessauer, project coordinator for the in the Department of Political Science, is both a teacher and a student at OLLI. While teaching classes on Koru mindfulness and meditation, she has taken an art class and a course about 鈥淵oga Nidra,鈥 a systematic approach to relaxation at OLLI and notes that taking courses has helped her to explore new interests.聽
鈥淧eople may think that OLLI is predominantly for those who have reached retirement,鈥 Dessauer said. 鈥淵et as someone who is far from retiring, I encourage anyone who may think this way to revisit their assumption and explore OLLI鈥檚 class offerings. There is something there for everyone.鈥
Ruth Caccavale, a museum gallery guide manager at the , has taken and taught OLLI courses.
This May, Caccavale, as part of the 鈥淐harlotte Culture Tour 鈥 course, will co-lead participants on a trip to see art museums in Charlotte, which includes private tours of The Mint Museum, the Bechtler Museum of Modern Art and the McColl Center. Caccavale and fellow instructor Suzanne Fetscher have also arranged a walking tour of public art and contemporary architecture in the city.
鈥淭he thing I like about teaching OLLI students is they鈥檙e very interested and engaged,鈥 said Caccavale, who was an adjunct art professor at Rutgers University before she came to Duke. 鈥淭hey come to class with experiences and opinions, and a lot of curiosity. They鈥檙e sort of a dream group as an educator.鈥
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