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John Reitman

By John Reitman

Blind golf pro earns degree in turf management

Editor's note: We've heard of superintendents and golf professionals advancing their careers by becoming a general manager, but we've never heard of a golf pro earning a degree in turf management. And we've really never heard of one studying turf with hopes of one day becoming an agronomy instructor.
 
Until now.
 
William Elam, or Monty as he is known, is a golf pro at a course in southeastern Michigan and recently earned a degree in turfgrass management from the Penn State World Campus. The following is reprinted with permission from Penn State. Look for more on Elam's story at a later date.
 
Monty Elam has been legally blind since an operation almost a decade ago left him without sight in either eye. But that didn't stop him from earning a bachelor's degree in turfgrass science online through Penn State World Campus.
 
Being legally blind hasn't stopped Monty Elam from earning a degree in turf management and pursuing a master's degree. Photo by Jeremy Wadsworth via Penn State.Elam, 52, is one of the almost 14,000 students who graduated during the university's spring commencement.
 
Elam chose World Campus for its flexibility and so that he wouldn't have to rely on other people to drive him to classes at a traditional campus. Most of his classmates aren't aware of his disability, he said, even when they do group projects together.
 
"All the professors have been wonderful," he said. "They've been very accommodating."
 
Elam completed his degree while working full time as director of golf at Whiteford Valley Golf Club in Ottawa Lake, Michigan, near his home in Toledo, Ohio.
 
Every spring as the weather warms up, life at the course gets hectic just as his end-of-term coursework also would ramp up, Elam said.
 
"Things are good until April," he said. "Then it gets tough, with finals coming up and projects due and the golf course starting to get busy."
 
Elam usually did his coursework at night and early in the morning. 
 
"I'll get up at 4, 4:30 a.m. and do work then," he said. "I'm one of those people who doesn't require a lot of sleep."
 
Elam regained some vision in his left eye after a 2008 operation, but he compared his vision to holding "a paper towel tube over your eye, with a piece of tissue paper over it."
 
He uses his computer to enlarge text when he reads and has a document reader that reads to him. He also has a monitor that allows him to view enlarged paper documents.
 
World Campus gives Elam extra time on exams, since it takes him longer to read questions. Terry Watson, the disability services coordinator for World Campus, helps Elam get electronic versions of his course books so that he can enlarge the print or have the computer read them to him.
 
Elam now is working toward a master's degree in turfgrass management program through World Campus. His ultimate goal is to teach agronomy and turfgrass management after he retires.





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