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“I left school with nothing” — Dundee man, 87, returns to university for eighth degree

Alex Stewart with a clutch of degrees.
Alex Stewart with a clutch of degrees.

An 87-year-old Dundee man who left school “with nothing” has returned to university to begin work on his eighth degree.

Alex Stewart returned to classes at Dundee University last week where he is studying for a Liberal Arts Degree.

Alex left school at the age of 14 and did not return to education until his retirement at the age of 65.

He quickly adapted to student life and has already earned seven degrees.

He said: “I suspect I’ll have my hands full this year, as I am entering directly into second year.

“Studying does become a way of life and a healthy way of life, as there are an awful lot of elderly people at a loose end. I just wished there were more retirees like myself in the class. It’s good to challenge yourself and also to challenge the young students.

“There are no shortcuts in learning. The biggest challenge you can face is educating yourself. No one was holding up a whip or a stick. I’ve come back because I wanted the challenge.”

Alex spent his military service as a radio operator in the RAF before working for most of his career as a surveyor across the UK.

Upon retiring, he seized the opportunity to return to education after seeing his sons pass through Dundee University.

He has obtained his previous degrees in subjects including sociology, philosophy, and town and regional planning from the universities of Dundee, St. Andrews and Abertay.

“I was born in the days of the jute industry in Dundee,” he said.

“Both my parents worked hard and my father said to me, ‘You’ve got a good report son but you’ll have to leave school when you are 14 and go get a job’. These were the days when parents would have to pay for the academies and so that was the end of me learning anything.

“I left school with nothing.

“According to a meeting with the headmaster of Logie School, I could have gone to Harris Academy but instead I went into the world of work in the jute industry, as did most of my generation.

“Studying today is about the virtue of learning. What I would say to the younger folk, when picking a degree, is think about what will be useful for society in a few years’ time, but I would also tell those returning to education to study what they are passionate about.”