Published on February 3, 2026

For Nathan Sullivan, returning to college was never about starting over. It was about moving forward with intention.
A Benton native, husband and father, Nathan graduated from John A. Logan College in December 2025 and was named the College’s Career and Technical Education Student of the Year. As a non-traditional student balancing family life, work and one of the College’s most rigorous technical programs, his journey reflects perseverance, leadership and purpose.
After graduating from Benton High School, Nathan began his career by earning multiple welding certificates at Rend Lake College. He spent several years working in metal fabrication before an opportunity in 2016 took him in a very different direction. He joined a high-performance motorsports team and spent years traveling the country. “It was an incredible experience and taught me a lot,” Nathan said.
While traveling for work, Nathan met his wife and quickly realized the lifestyle was not compatible with the future he wanted. Being gone most of the year made it clear that something had to change. “I knew I needed to come home, settle down and build something long term,” he said.
After returning to Southern Illinois, Nathan worked a variety of local jobs, including several years at Camping World in Marion. When the location closed, he found himself facing an unexpected turning point. Around the same time, he and his wife learned they were expecting their first child.
Through Man-Tra-Con, a workforce development agency, Nathan was offered the opportunity to return to college as a displaced worker and retrain for a new career. Initially hesitant, he decided to move forward with encouragement from his wife.
Nathan enrolled at John A. Logan College knowing life was about to change in more ways than one. “Our daughter was born four days before the semester started,” he said. “It was confusing at first.”
Balancing new parenthood with college coursework brought long days and even longer nights. Still, Nathan committed fully to the challenge. He enrolled in the Computer Support and Networking program within the Electronics and Learning Technologies degree.
The hands-on nature of the program proved to be a turning point. Working directly with equipment and systems helped concepts click in a way traditional classroom learning never had. “Being able to actually build something and see how it works is what made it click,” he said.
As a non-traditional student, Nathan drew confidence from years of work experience. Rather than feeling intimidated, he approached the classroom eager to learn and engage with instructors who were deeply invested in teaching.
While balancing demanding coursework, Nathan also worked as a student worker in Information Technology department. Beyond his IT role, he consistently volunteered his time to support ELT projects whenever possible. According to instructor Rob Craig, Nathan’s impact extended far beyond assignments and grades. “Nathan’s involvement went well beyond coursework,” Craig said. “He made every class better and is exactly the kind of student you hope for every semester.”
During his time at John A. Logan College, Nathan represented the College at the 2025 HackVentors Conference, presenting a networking technology table to high school students. He showcased advanced projects from the Internet of Things and Microprocessors courses, helped lead ELT students wiring a Marion High School Building Trades house for ethernet data, and assisted with trimming and testing network wiring at the Murphysboro Habitat for Humanity house during finals week.
Craig noted that Nathan regularly stepped up when help was needed, including taking time off work to support projects.
Inside and outside the classroom, Nathan became a leader among his peers. Although he initially felt disconnected as an older student, those barriers faded as relationships formed. “The longer I was here, the more we became friends,” Nathan said. “We worked together, learned together and pushed each other.”
At home, the balance was just as challenging. Nathan admits there were moments of guilt as he watched his daughter grow while he studied at the kitchen table. Still, he knew the sacrifice was temporary and necessary. “I had to do this now so I could be there more for her later,” he said.
That motivation carried him through the toughest moments. “You don’t quit when someone depends on you,” said Nathan.
Nathan graduated in December 2025 and was named ELT Computer Support and Networking Freshman Student of the Year, an honor he did not expect. “You put your head down and you try,” he said. “Even when you think nobody notices, people do.”
Even before graduation, Nathan’s next chapter was already underway. He accepted a full-time position and began work the Monday after finals ended. Today, he works as a structured cabling engineer with Northbridge I.T. Services in Marion, applying the skills he built in the classroom and lab every day.
Looking back, Nathan is quick to express gratitude. He credits his wife for being his rock throughout the journey and for carrying the weight during the most demanding seasons. He also credits his daughter, Harper, as his greatest motivation. “She doesn’t know it yet,” he said, “but she was the driving force behind everything I did.”
Years earlier, Nathan left a career that kept him on the road most of the year because he wanted something different. He wanted to be home. He wanted to build something that would last. Returning to college through Career and Technical Education gave him the opportunity to do exactly that. “Getting to use both your mind and your hands to troubleshoot and resolve issues is very rewarding,” Nathan said.
Today, Nathan is doing work he enjoys, in a field he believes in, while building a life centered on the people who matter most. For him, coming back to John A. Logan College was never about starting over. It was about moving forward with purpose and finally putting all the pieces together.