Background about me:
- Born and raised in Monroe, WI (a small farm town in southern WI
with 10,000 people and probably 40,000 cows)
- Graduated from Monroe High School (somewhere between average and
just
above average)
- Attended UWSP as a freshman directly out of high school as a
chemistry
student in Pre-Med
- Hated the thought of going into medicine and dropped out
eventually
working night shift at a convenience store (these were not my finest
hours)
- Trained at Northeast Wisconsin Technical Institute in Green Bay,
WI in their Jewelry
Design
and Repair Program
- Moved to Italy to live in an 11th century farm house in the
mountains
north of Florence for an apprenticeship with the Christian Brother
Jerome Cox as
a jeweler and sculptor
- Returned to my home town of Monroe and opened M.P. Zach - Custom
Design
Jewelry. My store specialize in hand crafted jewelry that I created,
better quality commercially designed jewelry and repairs done in the
shop. Many repairs were ones that other jewelers were not willing to
try. Having a willingness to do tricky repairs helped build my skills
and grow my business.
- Closed my retail store and worked part time continuing my jewelry
business while completing my undergraduate degree at UWSP. I graduated
in 1997 with a BS in chemistry
(ACS certified)
and chemistry
with a polymer option.
- Attended a great program for my MS and PhD in Chemistry at University
of California-Irvine working with my advisor Dr. Reginald Penner.
UCI has many great programs and
I highly recommend it as a grad school. Following UWSP with a few years
of warmer weather and palm trees is pretty nice. It is fun to poke fun
at the locals for pulling out parkas when the weather drops below 68oF.
- Served as a Miller
Postdoctoral Fellow at University of California, Berkeley within
the Earth and Planetary Sciences
Department in the laboratories of Dr. Jill
Banfield and at NASA-Ames
Research Center with Dr.
Jonathan Trent
- Accepted the Glenn
Seaborg Postdoctoral Fellowship at Argonne
National Laboratory in the Laboratory for
Superconductivity and Magnetism
- Since graduating from UWSP, I have had numerous studies published and received nice
recognition for my work. I put these here
not to call attention to me, but to call attention to what you
can do in a few years from now.
As a Chemistry
105 student and a student at UWSP, you are only within a few months or
years of making your
own discoveries and doing some really cool things. When it comes to
chemistry education, UWSP is not some small little college that is in
the middle of nowhere. You are about to receive a great education that
you can use as a valuable tool for your future. The student to faculty
ratio at UWSP is a great advantage if you chose to get involved. You
can go anywhere you want!
- This fall I have returned to my alma
mater in
the Chemistry Department of University of Wisconsin - Stevens Point to
serve as an Assistant Professor of Chemistry. I will retain a joint
appointment as a Guest Faculty Researcher at Argonne National
Laboratory so that I can enhance the research opportunities for my
students. We
will have access to some of the World's
premier research facilities and scientists for selected
experiments. In addition there is some wonderful instrumentation to
conduct
world class research right here at UWSP. There are so many cool things
that we can do with the instrumentation
that we have right here on campus. If there are instruments that we
need that don't exist here, we can probably find it either within the
UW system or at Argonne National Laboratory. The Chemistry Department
at UWSP is great because there is a critical mass of experts in a
variety of fields. Check out our faculty and their
research interests.
- It is my goal to engage students in learning chemistry. My end
goal is
not to have anyone memorize a mess of disjointed facts for a test that
will be forgotten soon afterwards, but to train my students to apply
chemistry as a tool for whatever field they
choose. Learning chemistry
is not a goal in and of itself. Without being able to apply the raw
knowledge, all the facts are useless. I want to also give them
opportunities to apply what they use directly by providing
opportunities to do undergraduate research. My projects are mostly in
the electrodeposition field or in fundamental nanotechnology research.