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· B.S., M.S., University of Alaska
Fairbanks · Ph.D., Stanford University
View
Roman Dial's Curriculum Vitae.
roman@alaskapacific.edu
For me, the best part of being an
academic is when I share in the learning experience. That is, when I
learn too. And this happens best with a group of seven to ten
students who are adventuresome and eager to discover new ideas,
perspectives, and stories. Who seek not a dry recitation of facts,
but an uncovering of understanding through the direct experience of
learning. |
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After my first winter as a college freshman
in Alaska, I nearly left the state, never to return. The dark and
the distance from home isolated me. The apparent lack of culture -
perhaps simply the over-dominance of the human by the natural -
disoriented me. But after a summer climbing mountains, working
canneries, and hitching the empty highways, I realized I had to
stay.
That was 25 years ago.
Through the late 70's,
the 80's and most of the 90's, I pursued a near obsession with
Alaskan wilderness, while simultaneously nurturing an academic
intrigue with ecology. I scaled rock and ice, skied glaciers,
paddled rivers. I studied for four degrees, two in mathematics
(B.S., M.S.) and two in biology (B.S., Ph.D). I learned to
"packraft", "hellbike", and "glacier skate". I learned to integrate,
analyze, and communicate. Magazines and newspapers ran my hyperbole
and exploits; peer-reviewed journals published my theory and data.
For me the wild side feeds emotion and spirit; the analytic side
feeds intellect and family.
So now, a professor at Alaska
Pacific University, I feel blessed with an eclectic convergence. I
indulge in my passions at will. I can take a class to the tropics or
the arctic, where we can lie on our bellies and watch musk ox or
dangle from ropes and watch monkeys. We can even move from tree to
tree - "canopy trek" - collecting observations en route. We can
paddle autumn rivers into Canada. Or read Sir Robert May on chaos,
Benoit Mandelbrot on fractals and Per Bak on complexity. We can do
wilderness and travel. We can do math and statistics. We can do
nature and science. And we can find surprise and delight and
challenge in it all.
Videos and more information: http://polar.alaskapacific.edu/rdial
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