As Wisconsin ages, UW-Green Bay looks to older adults to boost enrollment — and keep minds sharp | Wausau Pilot & Review

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“Inside University of Wisconsin-Green Bay’s Christie Theatre, retired judge Mark Warpinski leads a discussion about how judges decide on the sentences they impose. Roughly 50 students nod along, take notes and eagerly wave their hands in the air to debate how they’d sentence someone for a hypothetical crime. 

The unusually lively audience betrays that this isn’t a typical sleepy morning lecture — most of Warpinski’s students are over the age of 50. 

‘We pay attention. We ask questions. We’re not sitting on our cellphones and scrolling … like I guess most college students nowadays do,’ said 76-year-old student Norman Schroeder. 

Classrooms full of older adults are becoming more common at UWGB.

As Wisconsin’s workforce ages and universities nationwide see fewer traditional college-aged students, UWGB is trying several unorthodox efforts to attract older learners. That includes more short-term certificates that advance workers’ job skills, ungraded courses that keep older students socially engaged and classes in local nursing homes.” 

Source: https://wausaupilotandreview.com/2026/01/14/as-wisconsin-ages-uw-green-bay-looks-to-older-adults-to-boost-enrollment-and-keep-minds-sharp/#google_vignette