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Making Time for More Degrees

精品成人福利在线 University Adjunct Professor Joseph Segriff has earned 24 degrees in his ongoing lifelong pursuit of knowledge

Posted in: Communication and Media, Homepage News

A man sits at his desk smiling with many diplomas on the wall behind him.
Montclair Adjunct Professor Joseph Segriff sits in front of only some of the 24 college and university diplomas he鈥檚 earned as a lifelong learner.

From African American Studies and Biotechnology to Psychology and Social Science, 精品成人福利在线 University Adjunct Professor Joseph Segriff has an interest 鈥 and a degree 鈥 in it. Many of the 24 college degrees he鈥檚 earned from 13 colleges and universities over the last 35 years adorn his living room walls. To date, he鈥檚 attained three doctorates, one post-master鈥檚 Education Specialist degree, six master鈥檚, two bachelor鈥檚 and 12 associate degrees, not to mention many certificates.

Why so many degrees?

鈥淚 like being a lifelong learner,鈥 says Segriff, who has taught at Montclair for four years. 鈥淚 like continuing my educational pursuits as a thinker and a learner.鈥

Segriff, who teaches two classes of Fundamentals of Speech in the School of Communication and Media, adds: 鈥淚t’s like the Buddhists say, 鈥楾he important time is now, the important place is here.鈥 And there’s nowhere I’d rather be than in a seat in a classroom or in front of students teaching.鈥

Not surprisingly, Segriff鈥檚 well-versed on a variety of subjects and finds psychology and biology particularly interesting. 鈥淧sychology addresses human issues in a way that biology doesn’t. But biology demands of itself, a certain degree of exactitude.鈥 It also demands lots of math courses, which he admits are 鈥渘ot my strong suit,鈥 particularly pre-calculus. He jokes that he鈥檇 rather get 鈥渢he needle鈥 than take pre-calc again.

A smiling man looks at one of many diplomas on the wall.
The coursework is no cakewalk for the learned professor. 鈥淚 work really hard, and I hardly ever miss a class,鈥 he says.

A loquacious learner

Segriff鈥檚 supervisor, Assistant Professor Marylou Naumoff, coordinator of the School of Communication and Media鈥檚 Fundamentals of Speech Program, recalls that their first conversation during his job interview lasted about an hour and a half. 鈥淗e’s very loquacious. He’s so smart and has so many interests.鈥

Segriff says he knew early on he wanted to stay in academia. He鈥檚 worked primarily part time as an adjunct, which allows him time to take classes, study and write papers (he once wrote six in one night).

It probably also helps that in addition to his part-time work schedule, he sleeps only three to four hours a night, something he says he鈥檚 done for the past 40-plus years. 鈥淪o, I’ve been able to get a lot of work done,鈥 he says, adding, 鈥淚 have an enormous amount of energy.鈥

Segriff says he鈥檚 never sought degrees for jobs or money. 鈥淚t’s kind of like stepping into your own shadow, and instead of escaping yourself, you become more of the self you imagine yourself to be. I think that has a lot to do with my educational journey and why I pursued more degrees. It’s just part of who I am.鈥

A man鈥檚 hand points to a diploma on a wall.
Montclair Adjunct Professor Joseph Segriff says obtaining degrees is 鈥渏ust part of who I am.鈥

While his many degrees are one measurement of learning, self-efficacy 鈥 or his belief in his ability to be able to get it done 鈥 is his ultimate goal. 鈥淪elf-esteem, for me, is not that important,鈥 he says. 鈥淲hat’s really important is self-efficacy. And if you don’t have self-efficacy, in my view, you don’t own your accomplishments.鈥

Segriff鈥檚 love of learning, Naumoff says, is an admirable reminder of what a liberal arts education is all about. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the pursuit of knowledge for knowledge鈥檚 sake and just a true intellectual thirst and curiosity that I find so wonderful and refreshing. Joseph embodies all of those values that we, as a university system, are trying to preserve and uphold and also still make relevant in a contemporary context. I love that Joseph is pursuing his passion, taking advantage of all the opportunities he can find just to learn more. It’s not like he has this specific end goal of getting a tenure track job. He just wants to keep feeding that brain of his.鈥

A man stands in front of a wall covered with diplomas.
Montclair Adjunct Professor Joseph Segriff says his more recent focus on community college degrees is due to economics and his varied interests.

Degrees of knowledge

In the pursuit of that brain fuel, Segriff has most recently earned a dozen associate degrees, including 10 from 2020 to 2022, and seven in 2022 alone. Coursework was both in person and online.

A breakdown of Segriff鈥檚 degrees as of February 2023 include:

  • Doctorates聽鈥 [3] Two from Drew University, Doctor of Medical Humanities and Doctor of Letters, and one from University of Buffalo, PhD in English Education
  • Post-master鈥檚 degree聽鈥 [1] Education Specialist, Rutgers University
  • 惭补蝉迟别谤鈥檚 鈥 [6] Two from Plattsburgh State University College (now SUNY 鈥 Plattsburgh), of Arts in Liberal Studies: English Language and Literature; of Science in Education 鈥 Administration and Supervision; two from Fairleigh Dickinson University, General and Theoretical Psychology and Administrative Science; and one each from Kean University, Psychology; and Monmouth University, Psychological Counseling, respectively; (He needs to complete an internship in order to obtain a seventh master鈥檚.)
  • 叠补肠丑别濒辞谤鈥檚聽鈥 [2] Anthropology and English, Plattsburgh State University College;
  • Associate degrees 鈥 [12] Six from Hudson County Community College in Health Services, Sociology, History, Psychology, Biology and Biotechnology; two from Salem Community College Liberal Arts and Health Science, and one each from Bergen Community College, Cinema Studies; Clinton Community College, Humanities and Social Science; Social Science, Middlesex College, African American Studies; and Warren County Community College, Social Science. Mostly, he graduated with honors.
  • He鈥檚 currently taking classes at Reading Area Community College and Essex County College, where he expects to graduate with an Associate of Arts in Psychology and an Associate of Science, respectively, this spring.

As for the community college degrees, Segriff says it鈥檚 a matter of economics; it鈥檚 cheaper to take community college courses than courses at a university. 鈥淚t’s definitely more affordable, and it allows me to go into some areas that I know if I was to go in those areas as a grad student, I wouldn’t be prepared. So, I can delve a little bit into biology, biotechnology without having to worry about really doing very poorly because I’m not going to get a job in that area. I’m interested in getting a degree and being able to say, 鈥楬ey, you know, I did OK in biology. I wouldn’t get to medical school but I’m not looking for that.鈥欌 He did more than OK 鈥 he graduated with honors.

鈥淎s impractical as I am, spending money chasing degrees I don’t even need, the thing is it kicks into my self-efficacy, and that makes me happy,鈥 he says.

Segriff has also taught at several of the schools where he鈥檚 studied, and the subjects he鈥檚 taught 鈥 at 22 different colleges and universities 鈥 are as varied as his degrees. While the majority have been writing courses (he鈥檚 a poet, book chapter writer and an award-winning essayist), he鈥檚 taught everything from remedial reading and neuropsychology to English and public speaking.

鈥淧ublic speaking is the course I like teaching best of all because it’s the one course that when you teach students just that one semester, you鈥檙e right down in the foxhole with them. I tell my students the very first day of class, 鈥楢 week from now you have to weather all those eyeballs looking at you and that’s hard to do because you鈥檙e thinking that they’re looking in the crawl spaces of your mind and they know something about you; they don鈥檛,鈥欌 he says. 鈥淵ou have to look right back at them and control the energy. When you’re a speaker, you have a relationship with your audience.鈥

His vast knowledge and teaching method may make for an 鈥渁djustment period鈥 for his speech students, Naumoff says, 鈥渂ecause he’s asking bigger questions. Maybe they weren’t coming into the course used to being self-reflective or pulling things from different historical events.鈥 Not surprisingly, Segriff urges his students to learn about those subjects.

The early years

A native of Saranac Lake, New York, Segriff鈥檚 educational sojourn started at Clinton Community College in Plattsburgh, where he also taught in the early 1990s.

Segriff says he was a good but not excellent high school student. In college, he started making amends for being more of a jock and less of a star pupil (he played high school baseball and went to college on a baseball scholarship). 鈥淚 wanted to make up for the years I felt I wasted when I could have been very high on the honor roll,鈥 he says, adding that he became an excellent student in college, making mostly As.

Time is valuable

As for any future areas of interest and study, he says: 鈥淎 master鈥檚 in virology would be very interesting to me. It’s fascinating, when you look at bacteria through a microscope; it first looks like artwork, and you kind of realize how small we are in this world. And once you recognize how insignificant you are, that’s the entry level to make your life more significant.鈥

The 67-year-old Segriff says he鈥檒l never have to look back at his life and wonder if he did enough. 鈥淚’ve done a lot. Even if I didn’t go for another class or another degree, I鈥檒l still be plenty satisfied. We have a debit card on our time. I mean, I could be gone tomorrow. What鈥檚 far more important than money is time. And you have to spend time doing what really appeals to you.鈥

Story by Staff Writer Sylvia A. Martinez. Photos by John J. LaRosa.