Introducing Rachel Isaacs
As an undergraduate at the University of Hawai’i – Hilo, I had the opportunity to participate in research examining the succession of vegetation after lava flows. During my Master’s at Texas A&M University, I used a combination of field and GIScience skills to explore the impacts of ice storms in Virginia and Arkansas. This research and improving my technical skills helped me get a full-time position in GIS environmental compliance before I even graduated. While working full-time, I missed academic research and the opportunity to learn new skills. I leapt at opportunities when invited to join research expeditions examining the roles of fire and climate change in Mount Rainier National Park, WA and Denali National Park, AK. My career and these expeditions helped solidify how valued physical geography and technical skills were across private, government, and academic industries.
I completed my Ph.D. work at Pennsylvania State University in the Department of Geography. My doctoral work examined the spatial and temporal impacts of climate change on treeline in Denali National Park and Preserve, Alaska. At Penn State, I was also given the opportunity to teach my first courses and discovered how much fun I had communicating my passions to others. My research interests in biogeography, climate change, GIScience, remote sensing, and spatial statistics have led me to conduct research in several international and domestic locations including Scotland, Nicaragua, Alaska, Arkansas, Hawai’i, Washington, and California.
Though I have taught the Remote Sensing of the Environment course for ¶¶Òõ¶ÌÊÓƵ Boulder in the past, I am really excited to join the Department of Geography and Continuing Education full time. I look forward to working with undergraduate and graduate students in this amazing interdisciplinary field of study.
Photos are of me conducting field research in Denali National Park and Preserve, Alaska