Glenn Stutzky is the creator of MSU's zombie course — his grandson's advice was "Don't be boring." MSU In the Michigan woods, a group of students finds a bloody, unconscious young woman. They go through her backpack and discover a two-way radio but stay well away from her body.

Her arm is wounded and looks badly infected. Maybe she fell and cut herself. Or maybe she’s been bitten. After some debate they decide to tie her to a tree. They want to know if she has information, but some fear she could be carrying a deadly virus.

It's not your usual summer semester.

But for students enrolled in Social Work 290 at Michigan State University, their situation can't come as much of a surprise. They're taking a course called Surviving the Coming Zombie Apocalypse — Disasters, Catastrophes, and Human Behavior.

MSU's immersive online zombie course is conducted through an intense, real-time group simulation requiring students to survive while a mysterious catastrophe engulfs Michigan.

Course materials range from traditional readings on human behavior and disaster management to dramatic videos that present groups with life-or-death decisions.

Glenn Stutzky and his “Z Team” behind the course have joined educators around America who are using pop-culture hooks to explore more traditional research areas — from gender politics through Beyonce at Rutgers, to class systems through “The Hunger Games” at American University.

“A lot of teachers around the country — whether high school or college — they have important content, but sometimes that’s not really enough. You need to create investment, engagement and motivation,” Stutzky says.

With his zombie course, Stutzky appears to have succeeded. The undergraduate course sees over 100 enrollments each semester, and there has even been demand from the military, state police, and emergency managers.

While he was devising his course on disaster management and human behaviors in catastrophes, Stutzky’s college-age grandson had a piece of advice for him.

“Gramps, just don’t be boring,” he said.

While researching ideas, Stutzky struck upon the idea of basing the course on a zombie attack after visiting the Centers for Disease Control’s website during his research.

“There, looking back at me was a girl behind some blinds — she was a zombie,” he says.

The CDC uses a fictional zombie apocalypse as a hook for disaster preparedness information. CDC It was the website of the Office of Public Health Preparedness and Response, an arm of the CDC that was using a theoretical zombie attack as a way of attracting attention to its public safety messages.

The site always had good content on preparation and response, Stutzky said, but with the zombie angle, interest exploded.

“That’s where I got the idea,” Stutzky told us.

"The Walking Dead," as well as a host of zombie books and movies, has captured the public's interest. Gene Page / AMC To teach the course, Stutzky and the Z Team developed a new approach to online education they’re calling MOLIE. It stands for a Multimedia Online Learning Immersive Experience, and it appears to be doing wonders for student engagement.

Journal entries and videos produced by students show a high level of commitment and immersion that many teachers must dream of.

To begin, students are divided into groups and become stranded in the midst of an unknown disaster.

Slowly, they get more information.

Some of it is encoded. Some of it is garbled and incomplete. But through making decisions, exploring their environment, and solving puzzles, they gradually learn more about the unfolding catastrophe and often have very different responses to it.

Glenn's zombie course reveals some surprising things about how individuals react under pressure. Gene Page / AMC In the case of the unconscious woman, most groups restrained her until she regained her health. But fearing her reanimation as a zombie, one group decided to decapitate her.

The Z Team had been sure to include personal items in the girl's backpack to humanize her, so were genuinely shocked by the group's decision. In another incident, the team was surprised when groups refused to help a man pounding desperately on the door of their hideout asking for help.

“He was a pretty good actor,” Stutzky says, but it seems many groups weren't moved. “I was surprised. About half the groups didn’t let the person in."



By the end of the course, Glenn wants students to leave with an understanding that humans have always faced and endured catastrophes and will always continue to do so.

We asked him what the best way to survive a zombie apocalypse was, “be able to run faster than the guy next to you for one thing,” he said.

“It’s not so much about what kind of weapon you have and if you have enough food and a means to filter water, the best way to survive — even in a zombie apocalypse — is to have strong relationships with people around you, people that you care about and who care about you," he says. “Together we survive — individually, not so much."

Then again, Glenn admits, maybe he’s not the best person to be around when the time comes.

“I’m always slowing down, helping somebody out… you don’t want me in your group.”