Great-great-granny earns masters degree at 94

by phrolen | August 2, 2007 at 08:12 am
691 views | 27 Recommendations | 2 comments

Photos

Great-great-granny earns masters degree at 94

Great-great-granny earns masters degree at 94

see larger image

uploaded by phrolen

    Proof that the phrase lifelong learning truly means what it says. 94 year old Phyliss Turner recently graduated with her masters degree in medical science from the University of Adelaide in southern Australia. Mrs. Turner has seven children, twenty three grandchildren, and nine great grandchildren.


Great-great-granny earns masters degree at 94

1 hour, 55 minutes ago

SYDNEY (AFP) - A 94-year-old Australian great-great-grandmother has become the oldest person in the world to earn a masters degree, local media reported Thursday.


Phyliss Turner, described by one of her sons as having "an amazing brain," took her masters in medical science at the University of Adelaide in South Australia.

Turner had been forced to leave school at the age of 12 to help her mother care for the family after her father abandoned them, the Daily Telegraph reported.

Nearly 60 years later she enrolled for a Bachelor of Arts degree in anthropology at Adelaide and won a 12-month scholarship to study at the University of California.

"I entered university when I was 70 and I came top in the essay section when I did my entry exam," said the mother of seven, who has 23 great-grandchildren and nine great-great-grandchildren.

She graduated in 1986, did her honours in 2002 and then entered the university's medical school to do her masters.

Professor Maciej Henneberg, her supervisor, said Turner had "a lively and fresh intellect." The boast about her "amazing brain" came from her son Tom.

"We are very proud of her," daughter Anne O'Herran said. "She is the oldest higher degree research graduate in the world and we're putting her in the Guinness Book of Records."

The master herself said she was delighted.

"I feel very, very happy after five years of study, but sorry that I am just a little bit immobilised," said Turner, who uses a walking stick.

"I don't feel old and I would like to go on to further study, but I am a bit of a liability to other people now."

Despite her academic achievements, Turner said she was most proud of her seven children and two step-children.

"They were all very good children," she said.

Granddaughter Sue Rudall returned the compliment: "She is a strong old matriarch," she said.

Advertisement
recommend This comment thread is now closed
Vinny
Vinny
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 08:41 on August 2nd, 2007

As a 45 year old with no educational qualifications this story gives me great hope.

liamssoft
liamssoft
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 09:39 on August 2nd, 2007

phrolen, Good stuff.

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

NowPublic on Facebook

What is NowPublic?

NowPublic lets people work together to cover news events around the world.

Find out more

Crowd Power

Vinny
First Flagged at 8:41 AM, Aug 2, 2007 by Vinny
These members have powered this story:

Most Recommended Stories in Culture

 

closeSign in to NowPublic

is reporting from