Ola Louisa Watson Started College at 72 and Didn't Own a Laptop

One of Glamour's College Women of the Year, Watson had to learn technology from top to bottom. She's now headed to a 4-year university.

For more than 60 years, Glamour has honored exceptional college women across the U.S. This year, we turned our focus to students exclusively enrolled in community college. Ola Louisa Watson started college at 72 years old and was overwhelmed by the technology skills required. She buckled down, and now she's an honors student on her way to a four-year university. 

On her first day of college, Ola Louisa Watson brought a clipboard. How else would she take notes during class and make sure important paperwork, like parking instructions and directions, were visible at all times? “Everybody on campus—all the kids—thought I was an administrator because I was carrying that clipboard,” Watson tells me over Zoom. 

She laughs about it now but admits the clipboard was just one piece of an overwhelming technological obstacle course she had to navigate in order to assimilate and excel as a college student when she enrolled at Horry-Georgetown Technical College in Conway, South Carolina, in 2019, at 72 years old. She articulated this particular challenge best in her application to become one of Glamour’s College Women of the Year, explaining that she’d taken a refresher course on Word and Excel before school started so she thought she’d be good to go.

 “WRONG!” she wrote. “I was faced with having to operate the college’s WaveNet software program and had to learn to submit information via Dropbox. Within those first days and weeks, I had to learn McGraw Hill’s Connect and other software with assignments and tests which had to be completed and submitted via the internet. I had to learn to use a TI-84 calculator, I had to create PowerPoint presentations, access and use e-books, I had to make and submit videos for assignments, learn about WiFi.” And this was before COVID-19 hit and a whole new set of technological challenges materialized. 

A lot of people her age—most, maybe?—would have thrown in the towel and retreated into the very full and comfortable life they’d built. Why bother with the mind-melting tedium of mastering a T1-84 when you can enjoy your two grown daughters and two grandsons, the fruits of a 40-year career spent working with in-need mothers and children, your wonderful husband with whom you’ve just celebrated your 55th wedding anniversary, your home on beachside Pawleys Island ("as the crow flies, two miles from the Atlantic Ocean!”). 

 Watson is not one of those people. Although higher education didn’t become official until her seventh decade, school and learning has always figured prominently in her life.  

As a child growing up in Fayetteville, North Carolina, one Watson’s clearest memories was routinely having to stop what she was doing and hide underneath her desk in elementary school in case today was the day the atom bomb dropped. 

“It was called duck and cover,” she says, laughing at the quaint idea that crouching down and covering one’s head could protect from a nuclear attack. But this was the early 1950s, a time when Cold War anxiety was at an all-time high, especially in Fayetteville, whose proximity to the largest military base in the world, Fort Bragg, was significant. Also significant: the overwhelming number of military-adjacent children living in the city during those years. So many that Watson and her classmates had to go to school on split schedules. “Some of us went in the morning, then after Christmas to June you went in the afternoons,” she says. When she moved to Charlotte in fourth grade with her family, not only did the duck-and-cover drills start to wane but she was able to resume life as a regular full-time elementary school student. 

A good student, she says, all the way through high school. For many female baby boomers, attending a four-year college wasn’t unheard of, but it wasn’t at the top of Watson’s to-do list, either. “When I graduated high school, I’d thought a little bit about it but just couldn't get it together,” Watson says. “What I wanted to do was get married. I fell in love when I was 12 years old and never wavered from that boy.”

It was her parents who pushed her to pursue some sort of continuing education. “I’ll never forget my mother saying, ‘Dave’—talking about my boyfriend—‘is from a wonderful family. And it probably won't ever be a problem, but you need to know how to support yourself.’” 

And so off she went to an all-girls secretarial school, visions of Della Street looming (“You probably won’t know who that is,” she tells me, “unless you watched Perry Mason.”) After a year Watson became an executive secretary, but Della Street she was not. So she got married in 1966 and, while she enjoyed her first few jobs, two baby girls came quickly. 

Then, in 1973, an opportunity came her way to work for Florence Crittenton Services, a historical agency established in 1896 as a home for young women in crisis. Watson found working with at-risk mothers and their children to be so fulfilling that she spent 40 years in its Charlotte chapter, now called Crittenton Services of North Carolina, and credits this job—one during which she met mentors who she says taught her about community volunteerism, ways to make an effective political impact, and how to get things done in an ethical, responsible way—as piquing her interest in finally, officially, going to college. 

Still, it was a slow process. She achieved various certifications over the years before enrolling at Horry-Georgetown. And this time, getting it together would be an understatement. Despite the technological snafus and the crush of COVID, which forced her to convert her home den into a classroom, carve out space in her garage for a makeshift science lab, and figure out how to follow classes and assignments online, Watson graduated at 73 years old with an associate of arts degree in May. She is a member of honor society Phi Theta Kappa, and she’s been accepted at Coastal Carolina University to continue her education. The plan? To earn a B.A. in interdisciplinary studies with a political science concentration and a goal of being the best volunteer she can be. She has an internship lined up for July. 

As our Zoom wraps up, Watson—Southern to the core—invites me to stop by if I ever find myself in South Carolina but also makes it clear that age shouldn't ever be a barrier to education. "Make the decision to start. If you find out it's not for you, you haven't lost a whole lot. Any experience you have is going to enrich your life." 

Perrie Samotin is Glamour's Digital Director 

This story originally appeared on: Glamour - Author:Condé Nast

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