Bill Coplin Retires After 56 Years of Shaping Maxwell Students
Each semester, ended his introductory policy studies course in the the same way. He led his students to the first-floor foyer of Maxwell Hall, gathered them before the iconic statue of George Washington, and had them read aloud the Oath of the Athenian City-State engraved on the wall behind it.
The oath鈥檚 closing promise, to 鈥渢ransmit this city not only not less, but greater, better and more beautiful than it was transmitted to us,鈥 was in many ways the mission statement Coplin had been living since he arrived at 网爆门 in 1969 as an associate professor. Over the 56 years that followed, he founded the , mentored tens of thousands of students, authored more than 115 books and articles, and became one of the most honored and beloved teachers in the University鈥檚 history.
Coplin, professor of policy studies and Laura J. and L. Douglas Meredith Professor for Teaching Excellence, retired Jan. 1, 2026.

While he sought a quiet exit from a storied career, his legacy lives on in the impact on countless careers, and in the Bill Coplin Policy Studies Support and Experiential Learning Endowed Fund. Through Coplin鈥檚 estate, the fund will become permanently endowed, but it can immediately support policy studies students thanks to his initial contribution.
A devoted alumna is helping to build the foundation. Rebecca Edelman 鈥03 has pledged to match up to $10,000 in donations made to the fund now through the end of March 2026.
鈥淐oplin鈥檚 insistence on action over theory and real skills over fluff has shaped every job I鈥檝e held, every pitch I鈥檝e made and every boardroom I鈥檝e entered,鈥 says Edelman, who now leads Caper Associates LLC, an education venture that seeks to address the gap between traditional learning and workforce readiness. 鈥淚 owe a great deal to this program, and I am proud to carry its purpose and values forward.鈥
A Different Drummer
Coplin said he has always been an outlier in academia.
鈥淚 never followed a strict academic path,鈥 he says, pointing out that he finished his undergraduate degree at Johns Hopkins with a 3.2 GPA before earning a master鈥檚 degree and Ph.D. in international relations from American University. He emerged, by his own account, 鈥渃ompletely unconstrained by the reality of academia.鈥
As a professor, he focused on practicality. What skills do students need? What experiences best prepare them for the real world?
He founded the policy studies undergraduate program in 1977 on the premise of those questions and around the belief that students should leave college ready to make a tangible difference. The program required 30 hours of community service, embedded directly into the curriculum.
Coplin never asked his students to be selfless idealists. 鈥淚 ask students, 鈥楧o you want to do good or do well?鈥欌 he often said. 鈥淭he answer should be both, but unless you鈥檙e Mother Teresa, you should do well first.鈥
His mantra, 鈥渄o well, and do good,鈥 became a guiding principle among alumni, who often referred to themselves as 鈥渄o gooders鈥 as well as 鈥淐oplinites.鈥
Renee Captor 鈥80 said his teachings served her well as an attorney and nonprofit director. 鈥淪kills really do win, and as it turns out, Excel is life,鈥 she says, offering a nod to some of Coplin鈥檚 sayings. Another of his favorites: 鈥淟ife is an aggregation problem.鈥
Sam Underwood ’11 remembers receiving a less-than-ideal grade and pointed written feedback on an assignment from Coplin.
鈥淭hat was the first time anyone had told me in an academic setting that, if I was going to be successful, I needed to apply myself rather than just regurgitating the notes I had read from a book,鈥 says Underwood, who now leads one of Ohio鈥檚 fastest-growing startups. His message to Coplin: 鈥淵ou did well, and did good yourself.鈥
