Nov 26, 2024  
2019-2020 Hill Book (Class of 2023) 
    
2019-2020 Hill Book (Class of 2023) [ARCHIVED HILL BOOK]

Chemistry


Faculty:

Department Chairperson:
Marilena Hall
Office: Shields Science Center 340
Phone: 508-565-1182
mhall@stonehill.edu

Professors:
M. Curtin
M. Hall
L. Liotta
L. Tilley

Associate Professors:
C. Schnitzer

Assistant Professors:
D. Del Sesto
K. Harris
P. Lombardi
D. Rogers

The Department of Chemistry offers both a B.S. and a B.A. major as well as a minor in Chemistry. The Department’s programs have been approved by the American Chemical Society (ACS); graduates fulfilling ACS requirements will be eligible for ACS certification.

Departmental Mission

The Department of Chemistry at Stonehill College educates students in the chemical sciences by providing them with chemical knowledge, technical training, and the ability to think logically and analytically. This education covers the traditional chemical disciplines as well as those chemical disciplines that will have the strongest impact on society in the future. The Department instills a strong sense of professional ethics and responsibility in the students enrolled in the chemistry program.

Vision

The B.S. and B.A. programs in chemistry offer fundamental training in inorganic, organic, physical, biochemical, polymer, and analytical chemistry, and require a basic understanding of physics and calculus. Chemistry electives in advanced topics are also offered. The department instills in its students the ability to think broadly, creatively, and independently within the field and to communicate this ability both in writing and orally. To these ends, the Department provides many opportunities both during the academic year and during the summer for students to become involved in both undergraduate research and industrial internships. The culmination of this research is often co-authorship on conference presentations and publications in scholarly journals. In addition, each junior and senior Chemistry major presents two departmental seminars covering information from the current chemical literature. Each senior writes and defend a thesis (usually relating to research he/she has completed).

Both the B.S. and B.A. programs are flexible enough to allow the students to pursue objectives such as secondary school teaching, industrial, clinical or governmental employment, or to attend graduate school. They also provide an excellent basis for entrance into professional fields such as medicine, dentistry, nutrition, and psychology.

Learning Goals

Majors in Chemistry follow a curriculum approved by the American Chemical Society and will:

  • gain chemical knowledge, technical training, and logical and analytical thinking abilities in order to obtain and succeed in chemically/biochemically related jobs or to successfully attend graduate or professional school.
  • develop written and oral communication skills to convey scientific information clearly and accurately to both the scientifically trained and general public.
  • develop a strong sense of professional ethics and a fundamental understanding of the impact of chemistry/biochemistry on society, and act accordingly.

Programs

    MajorMinorEngineering Dual Degree