UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Eric Ekobeni learned how to develop a work breakdown structure — organizing a project into smaller, more manageable components — in his online Penn State business management classes. When it came time to put those skills into practice in an internship, he chose an unconventional route: helping build a school in his native Cameroon.
Ekobeni’s path to a Penn State degree has also been unconventional. A refugee from Cameroon who came to the United States in 2002 and received political asylum, he completed two years at a community college in Philadelphia and transferred to Penn State World Campus in 2013. Ekobeni, who lives in northeast Philadelphia and works as a senior analyst for Barclays in Wilmington, Delaware, completes his schoolwork at night and on weekends, while also raising three children with his wife, Alice.
Ekobeni “is a great example of what the adult student embodies,” said Michelle M. Kline, the Penn State business and accounting faculty member who oversaw his internship project. Ekobeni wanted to combine his skills with his passion, she said, and despite running into various bureaucratic obstacles, “he never gave up and continues to push on.”
Ekobeni expects to graduate with a bachelor of science degree in May. The internship required as part of his major is one of many ways in which World Campus students, like their on-campus counterparts, can take part in out-of-class engaged scholarship experiences that complement their in-class learning.
“Everything that I learned in classes helped me put together and run the project,” Ekobeni said. “I got a true sense of reality outside of the class setting.”