Houlton couple share path to UMPI degrees

6 years ago

PRESQUE ISLE, Maine — When Jessica and Christopher Morley participated in the University of Maine at Presque Isle’s graduation ceremony on May 12, it was a family affair. The couple joined 170 students graduating this year.

They have been married for 16 years and worked for the last six years to complete their degrees. Their four children, aged between 6 and 15, cheered them on as they received their diplomas.

Jessica Morley received her bachelor’s degree in social work with a minor in psychology. Christopher Morley graduated in December with a business degree in accounting. They’re the first to explain that they’ve taken very non-traditional paths in life and in their college education.

“We met on a Sunday and got married the very next Saturday,” Chris has often recounted. And while that wouldn’t work for everyone, it did for the Morleys. Now both 43 and living in Houlton, their family is complete with Phillip, 15; William, 9; Jacquelyn, 8; and Thomas, 6.

Chris started his college career in Orono before he and Jessica met. Jessica started her college work in 2012 in Northern Maine Community College’s Nursing program after Thomas was born. After completing all of her prerequisites but finding she’d have to wait two years for an available spot in the program, she decided to move forward with a Social Work degree at UMPI. She’s been a full-time student for the past year and a half.

“When I first went back, Chris had mentioned off the cuff, ‘Gee, I should go back to school, too.’ And that’s how it happened,” Jessica remembered. “It was part time for both of us over the course of several years, juggling each other’s course loads, taking classes here, at the Houlton Higher Education Center, and online, and trying to consolidate trips up to UMPI. When I was in class, Chris was with the kids, and vice versa. There was a lot of structuring and organizing schedules that way.”

Chris works at the post office in Houlton and was also a full-time student for the past two years. He took as many online classes as possible, including through the University of Maine at Fort Kent and the University of Maine at Augusta, to help with juggling schedules and travel time. Staying organized and finding a way forward, he said, was the name of the game.

Jessica agreed: “I have to give kudos to Chris because where I would see a roadblock or something that wasn’t going to be accommodating, he tends to be able to take a step back, look at things rationally, and say, ‘Yes we can. There’s a class online.’ Or, ‘There’s another option.’ That’s what made it work well for us: bouncing ideas off each other; helping each other out when we needed it.”

The couple said having faculty advisers who were accommodating and focused on their success was a big help, too: “Getting through to graduation, I relied pretty heavily on my advisor Stacey Emery for guidance,” Chris Morley said.

“Kim-Anne Perkins, Shirley Rush, and Jean Cashman — they understood that we might have to stay home for the day with a sick kid,” Jessica added. “Everyone was willing to work with us. We were both serious about going back to school and finishing our degrees, and everyone was always very accommodating as long as we communicated with them and put in the effort.”

Chris is looking for best ways he can apply his new degree, and Jessica is taking a short break before starting the master’s in social work degree program through the University of New England in August.

“A sense of accomplishment may be the wrong term for me,” Chris said. “I’ve reached a goal and it’s a powerful lesson, especially for our oldest, about doing well in school and finishing what you set out to do. If we’d gone to school 20 years ago, we could say we had to study all night long and work long hours, but living through it was a direct example for our kids.”

Graduating UMPI students receive a lapel pin depicting a snowy owl with its wings outstretched in flight, and they are asked: “Where will your wings take you?” Ask any member of the Morley family and they’ll tell you: it’s far, as long as you’re willing to work for it.

Submitted by the Community and Media Relations Office of the University of Maine at Presque Isle.