Dr. Baker earned his bachelor’s degree in Chemistry
from the University of Montana in 2006 and the doctorate in
Chemistry from the University at Buffalo, The State University of
New York, in 2011. He joined the Elmira College community in the
summer of 2011 and will be teaching the General Chemistry sequence
as well as Senior Chemistry Seminar.
An analytical chemist by training, Dr. Baker’s research
interests merge the fields of materials chemistry, environmental
chemistry and separation science. His current work focuses on the
novel application of liquid-phase separation techniques to better
understand the physical and chemical properties of magic-sized
inorganic nanoclusters.

Majors
Mathematics and Natural Sciences

Dr. Jared Baker
Assistant Professor of Chemistry
Assistant Professor of Chemistry
Dr. Christine Bezotte
Associate Professor of Biology
Associate Professor of Biology
Tel: (607) 735-1852
Email: cbezotte@elmira.edu
Office: Kolker Hall 206
Dr. Bezotte's Personal Website
Email: cbezotte@elmira.edu
Office: Kolker Hall 206
Dr. Bezotte's Personal Website
Dr. Bezotte earned her Ph. D. in 1991 from Clarkson University
in Potsdam, New York, in an interdisciplinary Chemistry
and Biology program. At Elmira College she teaches Cell and
Molecular Biology, Microbiology, General Biology and The Biology of
Cancer.
Dr. Bezotte is advisor of the Elmira College Medical Technology
program. She and undergraduate researchers
study such subjects as stream water quality, cellular cytoskeletal
arrangements in apoptosis, effects of non-traditional cancer
remedies, genetic markers in evolutionary relationships and
developments for learner centered classrooms. Her
research group has presented at various professional venues.
Dr. Bezotte co-authored and received a matching funds grant from
LI-CORE Scientific for a DNA sequencer. She is
committed to undergraduate student research and to community
outreach. She co-authored and received a grant from the
AAUW Foundation to support an innovative program, Women
Investigating Stream Ecology (WISE), to promote achievement in
science among girls in the Elmira City Schools. She
also assists parent-teacher-student connections through
“Family Science Nights.”

Dr. Pierre-Yves Bouthyette
Assistant Professor of Chemistry
Assistant Professor of Chemistry
Tel: (607) 735-1856
Email: pbouthyette@elmira.edu
Office: Carnegie Hall 101
Dr. Bouthyette's Personal Website
Email: pbouthyette@elmira.edu
Office: Carnegie Hall 101
Dr. Bouthyette's Personal Website
Dr. Bouthyette has taught at Elmira College since
1989. He regularly teaches General Chemistry,
Biochemistry, and (in Term III) Fermentation.
His doctorate is from Cornell University. A native
of Canada, he graduated from the University of Montreal.

Dr. Todd Egan
Associate Professor of Biology
Associate Professor of Biology
Dr. Egan earned his B.S. in Biology at Heidelberg College in
Tiffin, Ohio; his M.S. in Botany at Miami University in Ohio; and
the Ph.D. in Botany at Ohio University. Since joining Elmira
College, his research interests are to work with students on
salt-tolerant plant growth and seed germination. He has
published on the historic Lucy collection of the Elmira College
Herbarium, and actively publishes on teaching in the sciences with
an emphasis on laboratory activities. His recent
publications include a book chapter in Tasks for Vegetation
Science: Ecophysiology of High Salinity Tolerant Plants.
He teaches mostly plant-related courses including General
Botany, Ethnobotany, Plant Ecology, and Plant
Physiology. He also teaches Biological Concepts I, and
Genetics and co-leads the Term III trip course to San Salvador
Island in the Bahamas.

Dr. Lynn Gillie
Associate Professor of Biology
Associate Professor of Biology
Tel: (607) 735-1859
Email: Lgillie@elmira.edu
Office: Kolker Hall 203A
Dr. Gillie's Personal Website
Email: Lgillie@elmira.edu
Office: Kolker Hall 203A
Dr. Gillie's Personal Website
Dr. Gillie earned the Ph.D. in Zoology from Southern Illinois
University at Carbondale, having graduated from the University of
Minnesota – Duluth. At Elmira College she
teaches Ecology, Animal Behavior, Comparative Anatomy, and other
vertebrate biology courses. She has taught the field
course, Marine and Island Ecology on San Salvador Island, Bahamas
regularly since 1998.
A behavioral ecologist, Dr. Gillie studies – with
undergraduate students – foraging and population
dynamics of white-footed mice (Peromyscus leucopus) and perceived
predation risk in woodchucks (Marmota monax). S he has
been active as a member and officer of ACUBE, the Association of
College and University Biology Educators and has published in the
Association’s journal Bioscene: Journal of College
Biology Teaching.

Dr. Charlie Jacobson
Assistant Professor of Mathematics
Assistant Professor of Mathematics
Dr. Jacobson earned the Ph.D. in mathematics from Northwestern
University, and has been a faculty member at Elmira College since
1990. He teaches courses at all levels in the
mathematics program, and has developed new additions to the
curriculum, including courses on dynamical systems, probability,
and geometry. Since 2000, he has been a regular
participant in The Natural and Social History of Eastern Australia,
a Term III travel course. He is advisor of the Elmira
College mathematics club.
His primary research areas are in chaotic dynamical systems and
geometric visualization and construction. In addition
to paper presentations at conferences, he has constructed and sold
models of the hyperbolic plane for classroom use, and has had
crocheted geometric models exhibited in an art show. He
has begun studying problems in the statistical analysis of ordinal
scale data.
He is married, and has the extreme pleasure of getting to walk
to work every day with his wife, who also works at the
College. He enjoys gardening, hiking, and camping.

Dr. Daniel Kjar
Assistant Professor of Biology
Assistant Professor of Biology
Dr. Kjar grew up in Minnesota and attended college in South
Dakota. He did his graduate work at Georgetown
University in Washington, D.C. Dr. Kjar's
research focuses on ecology, computer modeling, and
bioinformatics. He studies alien plants, ant
communities, and the impact of sampling protocol on biodiversity
estimates. Dr. Kjar also collaborates with researchers
at the University of Georgia and the Smithsonian's National Museum
of Natural History to produce online taxonomic keys, species lists,
and searchable online databases.
At Elmira College Dr. Kjar teaches Biological Concepts
II, Developmental Biology, Evolution, Field Biology,
Introduction to Environmental Studies, and Invertebrate
Zoology.

Dr. Joseph Kolacinski
Assistant Professor of Mathematics
Assistant Professor of Mathematics
Tel: (607) 735-1953
Email: jkolacinski@elmira.edu
Office: Watson Fine Arts 104
Dr. Kolacinski's Personal Website
Email: jkolacinski@elmira.edu
Office: Watson Fine Arts 104
Dr. Kolacinski's Personal Website
Dr. Joseph Kolacinski, the son of William Kolacinski, a police
officer and Mary Kolacinski, an artist, was born in Brooklyn, New
York in 1964. He is named for his maternal grandfather, who was one
of the great pen and ink illustrators of the 1920’s and
30’s.
Dr. K grew up, mostly, in Lake Worth, Florida where he had many
strange and fascinating adventures. In college he studied
mathematics at Palm Beach Junior College and Florida Atlantic
University, culminating in a Doctorate of Arts from the University
of Miami in 2003. Along the way he became very active with Circle K
and Kiwanis, investigated American political history, read lots of
Science Fiction, collected Comics and attended every Rolling Stones
concert in the state of Florida in the 1990’s.
He has been teaching college mathematics since 1989. At Elmira
College, Dr. K. teaches the full range of courses in the
Mathematics Curriculum and has created courses like “A
Mathematician Looks at American History,”
“Mathematics for Elementary Educators” and
“Destination Moon: The Science Fiction of Robert A.
Heinlein.” His research interests lie in the areas of
Voting Theory and Mathematics Education and he has contributed to
both the Wolfram Demonstrations Project and the MAPLE Application
Center.
Dr. K. currently and happily resides in Horseheads, New York
with his wife, Dr. Joanne Redden, and their two cats, all of whom
hope to have many more strange and fascinating adventures.
Dr. Josiah Meyer
Associate Professor of Mathematics
Associate Professor of Mathematics
Tel: (607) 735-1989
Email: smeyer@elmira.edu
Office: Watson Fine Arts 218
Dr. Meyer's Personal Website
Email: smeyer@elmira.edu
Office: Watson Fine Arts 218
Dr. Meyer's Personal Website
Dr. Meyer has been teaching Mathematics at Elmira College since
1978. He teaches the full range of undergraduate
mathematics courses. He holds the bachelors degree in
Mathematics from the University of Chicago and the doctorate in
Mathematics from Washington University in St. Louis.
His doctoral research was in the area of Differential Geometry (at
one point he was probably the world’s leading expert on
transversally parallelizable foliations in co-dimension
two).
Dr. Meyer has taught computer-related courses, with a particular
interest in Operating Systems. His current scholarly
interest is in understanding how people learn mathematics and
exploring ways to use technology to help students learn
mathematics.
Dr. Meyer has served as Chair of the Division of Mathematics and
Natural Science for four terms and has chaired the Faculty
Executive Committee often. He is the proud father of
four extraordinary young women and the doting grandfather of two
beautiful grandchildren.
Dr. J. Michael Pratt
Assistant Professor of Environmental Science
Assistant Professor of Environmental Science
Dr. Pratt earned the M. S. in Zoology from the University of
Massachusetts-Amherst and the Ph.D. in Environmental Science from
the University of Massachusetts-Amherst. He teaches a
variety of courses, including Introduction to Computer Information
Systems, Introduction to Paleobiology, and in Term III, The U. S.
Civil War in Book and Film.
His research explores archeological digs for fossils of New York
of the Devonian period and Mark Twain’s interest in
field biology, paleontology, and geology. Recent
publications include “A Fossil Guide to Mark
Twain’s Essay, ‘Was the World Made for
Man?’ in The Mark Twain Annual, and presentations to
the New York Paleontological Society at the American Museum of
Natural History, The Museum of the Earth, the Elmira College Center
for Mark Twain Studies and The Rochester Academy of Sciences,
(podcast for Scientific American).
Dr. Pratt’s favorite pastimes include listening to
world-traditional music and bicycling.
Dr. Jerome Przybylski
Associate Professor of Mathematics
Associate Professor of Mathematics
Dr. Przybylski earned the Doctorate in Differential Equations
from Western Michigan University in 1978.
His graduate study also included extensive work in statistics,
computer science and other areas of applied
mathematics. Before coming to Elmira in 1986 he served
on the faculty of the Pennsylvania State University where in
addition to undergraduate teaching he also taught graduate courses
and supervised masters theses in the area of Operations
Research.
Like all mathematics faculty at Elmira College, he teaches a
wide variety of mathematics and statistics courses. He
has been published in the United States and Asia. Dr.
Przybylski's current research is in the area of understanding and
facilitating the learning of college-level mathematics, which
includes developing pedagogy using specialized materials and
computers to enhance the learning of mathematics.
Dr. Przybylski has co-authored a text on Precalculus for
McGraw-Hill. In addition to mathematics, he is a serious jazz
enthusiast and often teaches a course in Jazz History and
Appreciation in Term III.

Dr. Corey Stilts
Associate Professor of Chemistry
Associate Professor of Chemistry
Dr. Corey E. Stilts earned his B.S. in Biology and Chemistry
from the University of Pittsburgh at Bradford in 1995 and his Ph.D.
in Medicinal Chemistry from SUNY Buffalo. Dr. Stilts joined Elmira
College in 2009 and he teaches the Organic Chemistry sequence,
Senior Chemistry Seminar and a term III course in Forensic Science.
He is also the advisor for the American Chemical Society student
affiliate chapter at Elmira College.
Dr. Stilts is interested in the applications of Photodynamic Therapy (PDT), which has been traditionally used a cancer treatment, as a method to reduce bacterial and microorganism infections. Dr. Stilts’ has had numerous undergraduate students present their research at the spring national meetings of the American Chemical Society.
Dr. Stilts is interested in the applications of Photodynamic Therapy (PDT), which has been traditionally used a cancer treatment, as a method to reduce bacterial and microorganism infections. Dr. Stilts’ has had numerous undergraduate students present their research at the spring national meetings of the American Chemical Society.





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