
Second Acts: How Does an Economics Professor Become a Zumba Instructor for Seniors?
Meet Mary Stevenson, who pivoted from the invisible hand to jazz hands.
Working · Slate Podcasts
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Show Notes
In a special five-episode mini-season of Working, we talk with people who have had “second acts,” that is people who made a dramatic career pivot at some point in their working lives.
If it weren’t for a shoulder injury, Mary Stevenson’s retirement may have looked completely different. After benefiting from classes in the Nia Technique, she decided to teach the fitness method—along with Zumba Gold and Ageless Grave—to older adults when she left the University of Massachusetts, Boston, where she had taught economics for 40 years.
Stevenson talks the challenges and rewards of making a career switch in her late 50s. You can email us at [email protected].
Podcast production by Jessamine Molli.
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