World Campus

Harrisburg man fulfills his late mother’s wish by earning Penn State degree

David Kern Jr. went back to school online through Penn State World Campus to get degree in human development and family studies

David Kern Jr., at commencement at Penn State Harrisburg's ceremony on Saturday, May 4. He went back to school online, through Penn State World Campus, to finish the degree he started in 1998. Credit: David Kern Jr.All Rights Reserved.

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — A Harrisburg man fulfilled his late mother’s wish to get his degree after he left college more than 20 years ago and suffered from substance abuse for a decade.

David Kern Jr., 44, graduated in May with a bachelor’s degree he earned online through Penn State World Campus while working as a counselor at a Harrisburg halfway house. He’d like to go to graduate school and become a licensed therapist.

“I have this amazing future now that I never would’ve expected or dreamt of in my entire life,” Kern said. “I never dreamed I would be graduating and walking across the stage, and it’s because of Penn State.”

Kern lost his mother, who had been in declining health from dementia, in early April, just several weeks before graduation. Years ago, after he got sober, she told him it was her dream that all three of her children graduate from college. He was the only one who had not.

With Penn State, Kern majored in human development and family studies, a fit that was perfect for him because he was able to study topics close to him, like substance use and the declining health of a family member.

“The degree has done a lot more than just teaching me what to do for my job,” Kern said. “It also helped prepare my family and me for how to deal with our mother’s declining health.”

He was able to get his Penn State degree while living and working in Harrisburg because, as an online learner, he had the flexibility to work and do his course work when it was convenient for him each week.

Kern was a music major in college after he graduated high school in 1998. He experienced burnout, partied more and more and eventually left college.

He said his life spiraled into drug and alcohol addiction, and he thought he would never get back to college. It got so bad that his family staged an intervention in 2007, giving him a wakeup call to get clean.

Kern decided to go back to school after a confluence of events: the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, a cancer scare and the start of his mother’s decline. He was working as a manager for a bookstore and wanted to change his life by finishing his degree.

When he got his acceptance letter from Penn State, he was shocked.

“All the sudden, Penn State sends me a letter saying I got in, and I was blown away,” he said.

He said he enrolled in school full time so he could graduate as soon as possible.

Kern said he will take some time off to work before he pursues graduate school to become a licensed therapist.

Penn State World Campus offers a Penn State education online, with a comprehensive selection of more than 175 degrees and certificates.

Visit the Penn State World Campus website to learn more about the programs offered online.

Last Updated May 10, 2024

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