Mark M. Green

Mark M. Green
Born April 6, 1937 (1937-04-06) (age 80)
New York City
Nationality American
Fields organic chemistry
Institutions University of Michigan
New York University Tandon
Alma mater City College of New York
Princeton University
Doctoral advisor Kurt Mislow
Known for Chiral Studies across the Spectrum of Polymer science
Notable awards Indo-American Scholar under the Fulbright Program (1976)
Special Creativity Award, National Science Foundation (1995)
Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (2000)
Fellow of the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (2003)
Jacobs' Excellence in Teaching Award, NYU (2006)
Spouse Anne Flournoy (m. 1985–)
Website
blogs.poly.edu/markgreen/

Mark Mordecai Green (born April 6, 1937) is an American chemist, writer and professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering at the New York University Tandon School of Engineering.[1][2] He is best known for his extensive work on stereochemistry and also for his book Organic Chemistry Principles in Context: A Story Telling Historical Approach, which he uses in teaching organic chemistry in an unprecedented way.[3][4]

Early life

Green was born on the Lower East Side of Manhattan and grew up in a low-income project in Brooklyn and went to local schools. He attended City College of New York, from 1954 to 1958.[5]

His grandfather, Mordecai Grunglaz (became Green in the United States), was driven out of Belarus in 1910 for his involvement in violent resistance to a pogrom, that led to the death of a Cossack. This separated him from his family so that he missed the birth of his son, Irving Green, the father of Mark. The family was reunited in 1920 in Mineville, New York.[6]

He has a sister, Dorothy Lederman, and a brother, Stuart Green, who is founder and director of the New Jersey Coalition for Bullying Awareness and Prevention,[7] a networking organization formed in 2000 in response to the bullying-related tragedy at Columbine.[8]

Career

After graduation in 1958 he worked as a technician for Pfizer Corporation in Brooklyn and then entered the United States Army for six months of active duty in Fort McClellan, Alabama, teaching aspects of chemical and biological warfare.

After fulfilling his service requirements, he worked first for Perkin-Elmer Corporation in Norwalk, Connecticut, as a technical sales trainee and then for Olin Mathieson Corporation in Hartford, Connecticut, as a technician.

After graduate studies at night at the Saint Joseph College for Women in Hartford, he entered New York University for full-time study. He left NYU in 1964 to accompany Professor Kurt Mislow to Princeton University, where Green was awarded a National Institutes of Health (NIH) fellowship.

From 1965 to 1966, he studied at Princeton. He graduated in 1966 with a PhD in organic chemistry. Kurt Mislow served as the advisor on his dissertation, The Absolute Configurations of Sulfoxides and Sulfinates.[9][10]

On completion of his doctoral degree, he was awarded a National Institutes of Health (NIH) Fellowship for a postdoctoral year at Stanford University, with Carl Djerassi as his postdoctoral advisor.[11] With Djerassi, Green studied the use of mass spectrometers in analyzing chemicals. He intended a career in industry, but was convinced to switch to an academic career by Djerassi and by his experiences at Stanford.

Green was assistant professor of chemistry at the University of Michigan from 1967 to 1974.[5]

In 1971, he was visiting professor at Instituto Químico de Sarriá, Barcelona, Spain.[9]

In 1972, he was visiting professor at Technion, Haifa, Israel.[9]

He was assistant professor from 1974 to 1976 at Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan.[9]

From 1976 to 1979, Green was associate professor at Clarkson College of Technology, Potsdam, New York.

He was visiting professor in 1978 at Jadavpur University, Calcutta, and National Chemical Laboratory, Poona, India, having been appointed Indo-American Scholar under the Fulbright Program.[9]

During the years 1974 to 1979, Green became known internationally for his work on the chemistry of the gas phase ions encountered in mass spectrometers. He was attracted to use stereochemical methods to explore a system in which precise kinetic measurements could be made under conditions where there was no intermolecular exchange of energy and therefore an impossible to define temperature. His work was continuously supported by the General Medical Sciences Program of the NIH, and to some extent by the Petroleum Research Fund administered by the American Chemical Society.

In 1980 Green moved to the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn (now the New York University Tandon School of Engineering) as an associate professor.[12] Shortly thereafter, he began to explore stereochemical ideas in polymers. In what became chiral studies of the cooperative nature of polymers he found unexpected phenomena, which have widely influenced work in this area. In 1984, Green was promoted to professor and made a member of the Herman F. Mark Polymer Research Institute.

He received a Japan-US Fellowship in 1989 from the NSF and spent a sabbatical year as visiting professor at Osaka University, Toyonaka, Japan.

He was elected as chair of the Polymer Chemistry Gordon Conference for the year 2000.[9][13]

He served for three years on the editorial board of the American Chemical Society journal Macromolecules, and he serves on the editorial board of Topics in Stereochemistry.[9][14]

For a number of years, Green has written a monthly column, "Science from Away", for The Inverness Oran, a Cape Breton, Nova Scotia newspaper, and The WestView News, a Greenwich Village newspaper.[15] The articles also appear in the NYU-Poly blog Science from Away.[16]

From 2008 to 2014, Green (under the name Mordecai Green) acted as story consultant for the long running web series The Louise Log and co-wrote all of season three.[17]

Research

Green began investigations of the cooperative properties of polymers in 1983 in what is now the New York University Polytechnic School of Engineering. Those efforts have been continuously supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF).[9][18]

He was awarded the Japan-United States Fellowship by the National Science Foundation in 1989 to support a sabbatical leave in Japan.

Professor

After leaving the University of Michigan, Green was assistant professor at Michigan State University from 1974 to 1976,[5] and associate professor at Clarkson College of Technology (now Clarkson University ) from 176 to 1979.

He is rated a popular teacher, having instructed several thousand undergraduates in his career and guided the academic output of the doctoral theses of nineteen graduate students. He teaches Organic Chemistry using the flip teaching method and a textbook he wrote for the purpose ("Organic Chemistry Principles in Context: A Story Telling Historical Approach”). He has recorded videos of a year's worth of lectures, making them available to students on YouTube[19] and Vimeo,[20] so they can study together with other students (peer learning).

Bibliography

Journal articles:

Green has published well over 100 papers. These have been cited close to 5,500 times in the refereed literature according to Google Scholar.[21][22] Some of the more frequently cited include:

Books:

  1. Green, Mark M. (2012). Organic Chemistry Principles in Context: A Story Telling Historical Approach. New York, NY: ScienceFromAway Publishing. p. 476. ISBN 9780615702711. doi:10.1021/op400045n. 
  2. Green, Mark M.; Harold A. Wittcoff (2003). Organic Chemistry Principles and Industrial Practice (Volume 24). New York, NY: Wiley-VCH. p. 341. ISBN 978-3527302895. doi:10.1373/clinchem.2003.029827. 
  3. Green, Mark M.; Nolte, Roeland; Meijer, Bert, eds. (2003). Materials-Chirality, Topics in Stereochemistry. New York, NY: Wiley. p. 624. ISBN 978-0-471-05497-9. 

Awards and honors

Personal life

While assistant professor at the University of Michigan, Green became involved in the antiwar movement (Vietnam). This led to him showing his students the NARMIC slides[24] prepared by the Society of Friends (Quakers)[25] at Swarthmore College, showing how the US was using illegal weapons in the war, weapons manufactured by major chemical companies in the US.[26] Based on his antiwar activities, the chemistry department decided that he had lost interest in research, and he was denied tenure. Many of his students expressed their support[27] for him at the time.[28]

Green has been married three times; to Vivian Green (Greenberg) (m. 1958–1969), two children, Lisa Elaine Green (born 1966) and Emily Beth Green (born 1968); to Janet Mark, M.D., (m. 1974–1979); and to Anne Flournoy (m. 1985–), two children, Frank Thurston Green (born 1989) and Carla Flournoy Green (born 1992).

References

  1. NYU Tandon School of Engineering, Mark Green
  2. 2013–2014 Undergraduate and Graduate Bulletin, New York University Polytechnic School of Engineering
  3. 1 2 Cable, Top Down Teaching
  4. Lessons from self-publishing a science textbook by Mark M. Green Archived January 5, 2015, at the Wayback Machine., Canadian Science Writers' Association
  5. 1 2 3 University of Michigan Faculty History Project, Mark M. Green
  6. Green, Emanuel (1967). My Fringed Garment (in Hebrew). translated into English by D. Luski and K. Cohen in 2006. Machbarot LeSifrut.
  7. Lawline, Faculty Information, Stuart Green
  8. NY.com, Stuart Green, Overlook social worker honored by professional organization for anti-bullying advocacy
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 NYU-Poly blog, Science from Away
  10. Princeton University Library entry, Mark M. Green
  11. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Mediander, Mark M. Green
  12. LinkedIn, Mark M. Green
  13. Gordon Research Conference (June 10–15, 2000)
  14. Wiley Online Library, Topics in Stereochemistry, Editors-in-Chief
  15. WestView News, Science from Away
  16. NYU-Poly Blog, Science from Away
  17. Mordecai Green on IMDb
  18. NYU Press Room, Tracking Down the Mysteries of Life's "Handedness"
  19. YouTube, Mark M Green
  20. Vimio, Mark M Green
  21. Google Scholar Citations, Mark M. Green
  22. Microsoft Academic Search, Mark M. Green
  23. Wiley Online Library, Topics in Stereochemistry, Editors-in-Chief
  24. Automated Air War (1972), The NARMIC slides
  25. National Action/Research on the Military Industrial Complex (NARMIC), American Friends Service Committee
  26. WestView News, Science from Away: Backwards Learning
  27. The Michigan Daily, Letters to the Editor, October 17, 1972
  28. "Michigan U. Professor is Reinstated After Ouster for Showing Antiwar Slides Stirs Campus". New York Times. October 15, 1972. p. 31.
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