Search for a Visiting Assistant Professor in Biochemistry
Welcome to the homepage for our search for a new colleague (full-time, non-tenure-track, three-year term) to start in September 2025. We highly encourage and invite applications from individuals from a wide range of experience levels and backgrounds to apply.
The job ad linked above has all the critical information for applying, so please do not feel obligated to read everything here. Our goal with this page is to be transparent and to help support you in applying, in keeping with our commitment to equity and inclusion. Please find below answers to frequently asked questions about:
- the search process,
- on the job: teaching and service
- support provided to faculty
- general information about 勛圖惇蹋, the Department, and the Saratoga Springs / Albany, NY metro area
Review begins Februrary 12, 2025 and will continue until the position is filled.
If you have additional questions, please contact the search and department chair, Professor Madushi Raththagala via e-mail (mraththa@skidmore.edu)
Special note: The non-tenure-track faculty at 勛圖惇蹋 have recently unionized and are negotiating their first collective bargaining agreement. This will be completed during Spring 2025. As such, the exact terms, salary, and benefits of the position may change, though we anticipate they will be the same or better than those presented on this web page.
The Search
There is a increasing and high demand for our biochemistry and introductory chemistry courses from students. We currently have three faculty that teach biochemistry. One has significant administrative responsibilities in the upcoming year and will then be on sabbatical the year after. Another will be on sabbatical after that. Thus we have three-year need for a new colleague who can teach biochemistry and introductory chemistry.
We are searching for a colleague who can (1) successfully teach in a supportive, equitable, and an inclusive manner (2) collaborate with colleagues to teach and contribute to the development of the courses they are hired to teach.
A Ph.D. in biochemistry, chemistry, or a related field is required for hiring at the visiting assistant professor level.
Prior teaching experience or training is desirable.
The required materials are as follows:
- Cover letter The letter should concisely summarize your qualifications for the advertised position, which will be expanded upon in your C.V.; why you are interested in the position; briefly overview your teaching interest especially in an undergraduate liberal arts setting; and how you will effectively engage with a diverse student body as a teacher.
- Curriculum Vitae The C.V. should highlight all your qualifications for the position. In addition to
your degrees earned, positions held and employment history, teaching experiences,
publications, presentations, awards, and funding, please do include any other experiences,
backgrounds, and expertise you find relevant for the advertised position especially if they relate to supporting
a diverse, equitable, and inclusive educational community. These could include:
- expertise in diversity, equity, inclusion, accessibility, justice, and belonging
- service to your department, college, field, and or community
- professional development (trainings, workshops, classes, and or conferences attended related to diversity, equity, and inclusion, teaching, mentoring and advising, scientific outreach and communication, science policy, writing grant proposals, managing a group, etc.)
- experiences and expertise mentoring and advising students
- leadership roles
- science policy experiences and expertise
- experiences and expertise in scientific outreach and communication
- expertise in diversity, equity, inclusion, accessibility, justice, and belonging
- A teaching statement that explains how the applicant will effectively teach, mentor, and engage with a diverse population of students in an inclusive manner, informed by their teaching expierience and training as well as the literature, and denotes courses they are interstedin teaching
- Copies of your undergraduate and graduate transcripts scanned into one PDF.
- Names, affiliations, and contact information of three professional references References will be contacted at a later stage in the search process. They should be able to speak, with evidence, to your qualifications to teach in our curriculum in an equitable and inclusive manner and engage in service.
Full-time: During the Fall and Spring semesters, faculty are expected to be available on campus for teaching as scheduled by the Department. Faculty have freedom to schedule their other duties and meetings as they see fit around their teaching schedule, but should generally expect to be on campus each day.
Faculty are not required to be on campus during winter and summer break, but they
are welcome to do so and will have office space available to them year round during
their employment.
More information on titles and ranks at 勛圖惇蹋 are described in the Faculty Handbook.
Non-tenure track: the person hired to this role will not be eligible to earn tenure.
Three-year term: The contract term offered to the successful candidate will be about three years long, from September 2025 through May 2028.
Non-renewable: We cannot guarantee to employ someone hired into this position beyond the three-year
contract length.
Tentative timeline. We will update this page as warranted. Last updated January 30
Review of applications begins by committee | February 12 |
Committee selects candidates to interview | Februrary 14 |
Interview list sent to Dean's office for approval |
February 14 |
Zoom interviews with candidates |
Februrary 20-25 |
One finalist candidate invited to campus for interviews. |
February 26 |
On-campus interview with finalist candidate |
March 3 - 6 |
Committee meets to discuss finalist. If approved, proceed to next step. If not, then they select another finalist and repeat the on-campus interview step. |
March 7 |
Offer extended | March 7 |
The campus interview typically lasts less than one day, including the following.
- Meetings with faculty members on the search committee (40-50 minutes, either with individual faculty members or pairs of faculty members).
- Teaching demonstration (25 minutes with 10 additional minutes for questions) Candidates will be informed well in advance about the topic and about the room the demo will take place in, relevant sections of textbooks, what level to aim for, and what knowledge you can assume the students have.
- Lunch with a group of students (1 hour, chemistry majors and minors).
- Meeting with the Associate Dean of Faculty for Diversity and Faculty Affairs, Janet Casey (30 minutes).
- Meeting with the Associate Director of Environmental Health and Safety, Kara Cetto Bales (30 minutes).
- Dinner with search committee members.
- An exit interview with the search Chair, Madushi Raththagala (30-40 minutes).
We know how busy everyone is and the added stress that reference letters can add to the process. We also know that letters can add bias to the search process. Accordingly, we do not ask for reference letters (aka letters of recommendation). Please do NOT have reference letters sent to us. We will not read them. Instead, we ask that you provide the names and professional contact information for three professional references. We may contact them at a later stage in the search process.
Teaching at 勛圖惇蹋
- The biochemistry courses you may teach are CH 341 Biochemistry Macromolecular Structure and Function with lab, CH 342 Biochemistry Intermediary Metabolism, and CH 343 Experimental Biochemistry Lab. CH 341 is a five-credit course, 3-credit lecture (3 contact hours, see below) and 2-credit lab (4 contact hours, see below). The instructor for lecture and lab some semesters is the same faculty member and other semesters the lecture instructor won't be the same person as the lab instructor. You may teach lecture or lab or both. CH 342 is a lecture only class (3-credits, 3 contact hours). CH 343 is a project-based 2-credit lab course (4 contact hours) that you can design completely around your area of research expertise.
- The introductory chemistry courses you may teach are CH 115 Fundamentals of Chemistry and CH 125 (or CH 126 when offered in the Spring) Principles of Chemistry. Both are 4-credit courses, 3 credits for lecture (3 contact hours, see below) and 1 credit of lab (3 contact hours, see below). You may teach lecture, lab, or both.
- Your total teaching load will be 18 contact hours per academic year (please see below for more details).
Please see Department Courses for course descriptions.
勛圖惇蹋 is on the semester system, (i.e., there are two semesters per academic year). All full-time faculty members teach 18 contact hours per academic year (average 9 contact hours per semester). Typically, this means each semester you will teach 2 or 3 sections.
Contact hours are defined by how many scheduled hours per week you meet with students for a class. For example, a section of CH 341 lab meets for 4 hours each week, so that constitutes 4 of your contact hours towards your 18 for the year. A section of CH 342 lecture meets for 3 hours each week, so that constitutes 3 of your contact hours towards your 18 for the year.
You can be asked by the Department to teach an overload, meaning teaching more than 18 contact hours per year. You do not need to do this. If you accept the offer, you will be paid at the part-time faculty rate, currently $2200/contact-hour, for all hours over 18.
Lab sections have a cap of 16 students, which is the maximum capacity of the laboratory space.
Lecture sections have caps commensurate with the cap on laboratory sections. For example, CH 341 lecture has a cap of 32 students when two lab sections are offered that semester (typically Spring) and CH 342 lecture has a cap of only 18 students (which has no associated lab). The introductory courses CH 115 and CH 125 typically have caps of 28-32 students in lecture.
No. For biochemistry and introductory chemistry, students must enroll in both lecture and lab at the same time. For grading purposes, they are considered one course. CH 342 and CH 343 are separate courses, so students can take them independently of one another.
Teaching during the summer is sometimes possible, for extra pay. You opt-in for summer teaching; you are not ever required to do it.
Service
Non-tenure track faculty on visiting contracts, including the role advertised here, are not expected to engage in service to the College. They may attend College faculty meetings and vote in these meetings.
Non-tenure track faculty on visiting contracts, including the role advertised here, are not expected to engage in service to the Department with the exception of attending department faculty meetings once a month.
If you are interested, you can optionally choose to engage in departmental service. We have six standing department committees (Curricular Assessment, Safety, Awards, Department Event Planning, Instrumentation & Capital Requests, and Equity, Inclusion, Justice, and Accessibility) that meet about 1-4 times per semester. Additional responsibilities as needed are taking part in ad hoc committees, supporting the chair and associate chair in ACS accreditation (every six years) and departmental self-studies (every ten years), and personnel decisions (optional for non-tenure-track faculty). Additional roles can also include overseeing the Chemistry Placement Diagnostic or the department webpage as desired.
Support for Faculty
- You will have a private, furnished office with computer (choice of Mac or PC). The College has site licenses for software including ChemDraw, MS Office Suite (Word, Power Point, Excel, OneNote, and Outlook), Keynote, Pages, Numbers, Box, Adobe Creative Suite, Mathematica, Gaussian, R-Studio, and SPSS.
- In the annual departmental operating budget, $500 are set aside for each full-time faculty member to cover societal memberships, buying books, paying for subscriptions, and other professional obligations and development. Additional funding can be requested.
- In the Dean of Facultys Office, the Travel to Read/Travel to Represent program funds a faculty member up to $1,850 a year for professional travel (e.g., to conferences). The funding covers travel, registration, hotel, and meals. Additional funding can be requested.
- Internal grants to fund collaborative research projects with students during the summer (student stipend, faculty stipend, student room & board, and small amount for supplies). The Chemistry Department is building a departmental endowment to also help fund summer collaborative research with students.
- to help pay for open access publication fees.
- has access to a wide range of chemistry journals including those published by ACS.
- Faculty development and initiative grants provide support to faculty to begin new projects or enhance current work (curricular pedagogy and scholarship).
- 勛圖惇蹋 College has an institutional membership to the (CUR), which enables faculty members to join for free.
- Intergroup Relations (IGR) provides workshops for faculty members to address racial conflict and other diversity related issues in the classroom as well as on campus and in their lives. Three chemistry faculty members have taken part in IGR training.
- The Center for Leadership, Teaching, and Learning(CLTL) runs a New Faculty Learning Community to provide a mentoring network for new faculty members.
- The CLTL also runs a number of pedagogy workshops and career discussions to help support faculty members. The CLTL also maintains a link to additional resources. Particular emphasis of the CLTL has been building an inclusive educational community on campus.
- The CLTL also has mini-grants to support events and projects that seek to enhance diversity and inclusion-related pedagogical efforts within the 勛圖惇蹋 College community.
- Scholarly and Creative Endeavors Work Groups provide a supportive community of scholars/practitioners across disciplines through the sharing of writing, research, and creative portfolios. Groups discuss scholarship and creative work at various stages of the process, successes and challenges in the classroom and in scholarship, leadership opportunities, career transitions, and mentoring. The CLTL pays for the groups to meet over lunch once a week.
- Sponsored Research Office supports developing, writing, and submitting grant proposals as well as managing funded proposals.
- Black Faculty/Staff Group strengthens the relationships amongst Black faculty and staff; builds community and outreach to students, educates and engages with the community on issues related to race, the Black experience, and anti-racism; develops relationships with Black community members off-campus, caucuses with other communities of color on campus, and strengthens relationships with allies.
- Faculty Handbook, and Faculty Development Handbook.
- Collaborative and supportive departmental environment.
- Clear departmental personnel policies and procedures
- Departmental peer class observations focused on developing as a teacher.
- Departmental repository of practices and resources regarding diversity, equity, inclusion, justice, and access.
- Paid student assistants to help prepare laboratory courses (e.g., make solutions, prepare small equipment, test protocols, etc.) and/or grade homework.
- 勛圖惇蹋 provides parental leave(birth parent/primary caregiver 1 paid semester off and non-birth parent/non-primary caregiver one course release).
The base salaries for faculty members are for the 9-month academic year (September-May)
paid out biweekly over 9 months your first year (September-May) and over twelve months
the subsequent years (June-May). Base salaries for new faculty members are determined
by several factors including years of prior experience and market forces, especially
for in-demand fields. 勛圖惇蹋 does make public to the 勛圖惇蹋 community the minimum
starting salaries for new faculty members. Recent hires in Chemistry typically have been hired with 9-month salaries above the
minimum taking into account experience after earning their degree and the job market
for chemists. The expected salary range for the visiting assistant professor rank is $66,000-$70,000
per year. Please discuss with the search chair, Madushi Raththagala.
Note The Colleges contributions towards retirement are on top of your base salary (see Retirement Benefits for more details) after a year of employment at 勛圖惇蹋. If you are already participating in a retirement plan at a qualifying institution, the year employment requirement maybe waived. If you are under 50 years old, 勛圖惇蹋 contributes the equivalent to 11% of your base salary to your retirement plan. If you are 50 or older, 勛圖惇蹋 contributes the equivalent to 12% of your base salary towards your retirement. Employees are not required to contribute to the retirement plan but can if they so desire up to the maximum determined by the IRS each calendar year.
The College provides a number of competitive benefits to faculty and staff. The summaries below are for general information. Please read the HR Benefits pages for key details. Please also see the Domestic Partnership Benefits Policy.
- Health Care Benefits
- Dental Benefits
- Life and Dependent Life Insurance
- Flexible Spending Accounts
- Retirement Benefits College contributes the equivalent to 10% (under 50) or 11% (50 or over) of the employees base salary towards the employees retirement plan and contributes an additional equivalent to 1% of salary towards the retirement plan in lieu of retirement health benefits (11% total if under 50, 12% total if 50 or older). The contributions are on-top of your base salary. Employees can contribute on top of the Colleges contribution up to the limits set by the IRS. Employees are eligible for the contributions to the retirement plan after 1 year of employment; the year requirement may be waived if the employee worked previously at a post-secondary, degree-granting institution or a qualified research organization considered tax-exempt under code 501c(3) of the IRC, and the employee has participated in their previous employers 401(a), 403(a) or 403(b) basic retirement plan.
- Tuition Benefits(Internal up to 100% of tuition cost for dependents attending 勛圖惇蹋; 勛圖惇蹋 participates in the Tuition Exchange Program; and External Tuition Benefits)
- Faculty Parental Leave
- On-site childcare (spots do fill-up quickly)
- Free and green transportation optionsincludes free rides on Capital District buses with 勛圖惇蹋 ID and free bicycle rentals also available. Resources for arranging carpools. In addition, two of the campus parking lots have electric-vehicle chargers.
- Downtown Purchase Discounts
- Professional Development
Overview of the College, Department, and the Area
勛圖惇蹋 College is a selective, private liberal arts college founded on the principle of making connections between theory and practice, between the mind and the hand. 勛圖惇蹋 College started off as an all-womens institution in downtown Saratoga Springs, NY. 勛圖惇蹋 moved to its current location on the northern edge of Saratoga Springs next to the North Woods in 1961 and began admitting men in 1971. Currently enrolling over 2,650 matriculated students, 勛圖惇蹋 is committed to teaching students to be active participants in our world who approach problem solving from particularly creative and interdisciplinary perspectives. An example of this educational paradigm is our , which has earned a national reputation for pushing beyond the boundaries of a traditional college museum to develop cutting-edge, exhibition-based pedagogies across the curriculum, including originated and co-curated by Ray Giguere in chemistry. 勛圖惇蹋 Colleges slogan is Creative Thought Matters to capture the central role that creativity plays on campus, not just in the arts but also in fields such as science, business, communications and the social sciences.
The College employs 286 full-time faculty members and an additional 103 part-time faculty members with an 8:1 on-campus student to faculty ratio. Just over two-thirds of the full-time faculty members are tenure stream. The Colleges 2005-2015 Strategic Plan laid out an ambitious goal of increasing the number of natural science majors by 50%. The College surpassed that goal with an increase of 90%. Currently, about one-third of all students major in the natural sciences at 勛圖惇蹋.
The Colleges 2005-2015 Strategic Plan also called on 勛圖惇蹋 to diversify its student body along with its faculty and staff. It has been successful in those endeavors as well. In 2007, just 10% of the graduating
class were domestic students of color and 1% were international students. Currently,
27% of students identify as domestic students of color, while 7% are international
students. Currently, at least 27% are students with disabilities based on those who
have contacted Student Access Services. Based on a recent HEDS survey, 32% of students are LGBQ+ and 2% are transgendered
students. The Colleges current Strategic Plan Creating Pathways to Excellence acknowledges we must do more than diversify our community; we also must be committed
to fully embrace our individual differences (e.g., personality, learning style, life
experiences), as well as group and social differences (relating, e.g., to race or
ethnicity, class, gender, sexual orientation, country of origin, and ability, as well
as cultural, political, religious, or other affiliations). It is a call for inclusive
excellence.
To that end, in 2020 the College started its Racial Justice Initiative and recently opened the Wycoff Center, "a dedicated space to discuss, collaborate and think creatively about equity and
inclusion." in the USC Race and Equity Center: Liberal Arts College Racial Equity Alliance (LACRELA). 勛圖惇蹋 was recently funded a three-year Andrew W. Mellon Foundation grant on Africana Studies and the Humanities: Transnational Explorations in Social Justice. In addition, 勛圖惇蹋 is a member of of the . As part of that initiative, 勛圖惇蹋 with 14 other institutions are embarking on
a six-year $8 million grant, Empowering Institutions to Develop DEIJA-Centered Systems for Teaching and Learning, to engage in cycles of inquiry to develop processes i) to evaluate teaching with a
DEIJA-centered focus and ii) for data-informed improvement of DEIJA decision making
and outcomes. Chemistry faculty are heavily involved in the HHMI IE3 grant with Kim
Frederick serving as the College's program director and Kelly Sheppard leading the
data-informed project at 勛圖惇蹋.
Staring with the entering class in 2020 (graduating class of 2024), students are under a new general education curriculum that puts a greater emphasis on integrative learning both within a major and across the liberal arts. The goal is for students to make meaningful and productive connections among the courses, ideas, and experiences of a liberal arts education by being more intentional in this process. The new general education curriculum has four major components. 1) Integrations moments where students are asked to be more reflective about their education and to make connections across disciplinary boundaries. The required integrative courses are the First Year Experience: Scribner Seminar, the Bridge Experience: Power & Justice, and the Senior Experience: The Coda. 2) Foundations courses centered around developing the skills and competencies expected of a graduate with a liberal arts education. The required foundation courses are Applied Quantitative Reasoning, Global Cultural Perspectives, Language Study, and Writing. 3) Inquiries courses centered on engaging students in particular approaches to studying our world and how we express ourselves. The required inquiry courses are Artistic Inquiry, Humanistic Inquiry, and Scientific Inquiry. 4) In the Major a set of skills and literacies to be developed and refined through the major. The requirements in the major are communication (written and oral), technology literacy, visual literacy, and information literacy.
The 勛圖惇蹋 College Chemistry Department aspires to be a model of an equitable, inclusive, and accessible program that offers students a supportive and high-quality education in chemistry, integrated with the other liberal arts, for both majors and non-majors, and, in the context of being a primarily undergraduate institution, is productive in research that actively engages our students in our scholarship. We therefore fully embrace the teacher-scholar-mentor model as the hallmark of successful chemistry departments at small liberal arts colleges. Supporting each and every student through equitable and inclusive practices is an important departmental goal (please see our Equity, Inclusion, and Justice Statement and Action Items). The Department is accredited by the American Chemical Society and we offer two majors, i) a Chemistry major and ii) a Chemistry major with a biochemistry concentration as well as a minor in Chemistry. Please see our student learning goals as well.
Over the last few years, we have averaged 21 total majors per graduating class. 勛圖惇蹋 94% of our majors take part in collaborative research during their time at 勛圖惇蹋. After graduating, about 35% of our majors enter graduate programs in chemistry, biochemistry, or a related field. Another 31% enroll in graduate programs in health care, primarily medicine, while 8% choose other graduate programs including pursing an MBA or a JD. Of those who dont pursue an advanced degree, they find employment in a wide range of positions in academia and industry as well as health care, sales, science education, and outreach.
Our majors mirror the diversity of the 勛圖惇蹋 student population if looking separately at race and gender with 25% of our majors being domestic students of color and 55% women. However, Black and Latina women are underrepresented as Chemistry majors compared to the College as a whole. In addition, our majors are more likely to be Pell-eligible than the overall 勛圖惇蹋 student body. With regards to S3M Scholars, a financial need-based scholarship for talented students interested in the natural sciences, about 8% of our majors are S3M Scholars compared to 3% of the students who major in the other natural sciences at 勛圖惇蹋. Please read our Equity, Inclusion, and Justice statement and action items to see how we are supporting our diverse student body and seeking to do better.
We are currently comprised of 14 faculty members (7 tenure stream faculty, 2 instructors, 2 teaching professors, and 3 visiting assistant professors), covering the five main sub-disciplines of chemistry, plus two administrative assistants (shared with Biology) and an instrumentation manager (shared with SAIL). Many of our laboratory courses incorporate projects and have students design their own experiments in a cooperative fashion with their classmates. In the classroom, we use multiple active learning pedagogies including group work with worksheets such as Process Oriented Guided Inquiry Learning (POGIL), pair-sharing, small group discussions, clickers, and Peer-Led Team Learning (PLTL). Many of us also use pre-course reflections to learn about our students and to get the students to connect their personal values with what we teach in our courses. We incorporate Universal Design for Learning and differentiated learning approaches. We have also designed more inclusive syllabi to be transparent, to better highlight strategies and approaches for success, and to communicate that we care and are here for our students. To cut back on the costs of taking chemistry courses, many of us use open educational resources (OERs) in place of traditional textbooks, including for our 100-level courses. In addition, we do NOT charge lab fees.
We actively publish peer-reviewed articles with undergraduate co-authors and present at conferences with our students as well as fund our work through both external and internal grants.
Instrumentation and Equipment
The Department has multiple instruments for research and teaching including spectrometers (UV-vis, FTIR, Raman, and NMR), a GC, an HPLC, a gas sorption analyzer, a capillary electrophoresis system, a scanning spectrofluorimeter, an IC, microwave reactor, and a microwave sample digester as well as multiple rotary evaporators and typical other equipment (e.g., analytical balances, heat blocks, freezers, drying ovens, etc.) and glassware. The spaces are equipped with multiple fume hoods, including those that are ADA compliant, with one research space also having a new glove box. The is a 400 MHz instrument with autosampler. The NSF funded SAIL has a GC-MS, an LC-MS, an FTIR, an atomic absorption spectrometer, an HPLC, an IC, an XRD, and XRF that are often used by members of the Department. Dr. Lisa Quimby serves as the instrument manager for both Chemistry and SAIL. SMIC houses a SEM, a TEM, two confocal laser scanning microscopes, and multiple light microscopes. Juan Navea and Kim Frederick were co-PIs of the Colleges Sherman Fairchild funded proposal that is bringing in an additional $494,240 in new instrumentation to 勛圖惇蹋 College (2020-2025) including for a new Raman microscope and electron spin resonance spectrometer. The College uses the REMI Group to cover the costs associated with maintaining and repairing the instruments. The Department annually submits capital budget requests to purchase new equipment and instruments in addition to seeking external funding. The equipment and instruments are housed in the newly opened Center for Integrated Sciences (see next paragraph).
Center for Integrated Sciences
勛圖惇蹋 has completed and is occupying the 118,000 square feet of new construction for the Center for Integrated Sciences (CIS), including the teaching and research spaces for the Chemistry Department (see next paragraph). The new construction wraps around the original Dana facility, which is now under renovation. Once the renovation of Dana is completed, the 10 Natural Science programs at 勛圖惇蹋 will be united in one modern, forward-thinking facility that has integrative learning and collaboration at the forefront with accessibility built-in and natural light to invite and welcome students into the sciences.
The Chemistry Department is located in the newly constructed wings of the CIS, so
the Department is now entirely housed in modern spaces. Chemistry occupies the North
(completed Summer 2020) and East Wings (completed Summer 2022) of the third floor
of the CIS. The space in the North Wing includes the teaching laboratories for 100-level
Chemistry courses (CH 115, CH 125, and CH 126) and synthetic chemistry (CH 221, CH
222, and CH 314) as well as the recently acquired 400 MHz NMR spectrometer with autosampler
funded through a . The primary teaching lab for CH 125/6 is ~900 square feet plus a ~390 sq ft dry
lab. There is an additional ~420 sq ft of space for lab course preparation shared
with the teaching labs for CH 115 and Inorganic Chemistry (CH 314).
The Chemistry research spaces are in the East Wing along with faculty offices and
the teaching laboratory for physical and analytical chemistry courses (CH 232, CH
332, and CH 333). The 勛圖惇蹋 Analytical Interdisciplinary Laboratory (SAIL), which houses several instruments used by Chemistry, is also very conveniently co-localized
on the third floor of the East Wing with Chemistry.
The Chemistry spaces are designed with team and active, project-based teaching laboratories
in mind (e.g., ) including dry spaces for students to plan and discuss their lab work together. The
Chemistry research labs in the East Wing are designed with collaborative research
with students in mind to build community and encourage conversations while facilitating
high-quality specialized research.
The research and teaching laboratories and offices for the two biochemists in the
Chemistry Department are a floor below, on the second floor of the East Wing, to be
co-localized with the faculty members on the molecular and cellular end of Biology
and Neuroscience.
The third floor of the North Wing of the CIS also houses Mathematics & Statistics. Environmental Studies & Sciences is located on the second floor of the CIS (North and East Wings) along with the ecology and evolutionary biology spaces of Biology (North Wing), the 勛圖惇蹋 Microscopy Imaging Center (SMIC) (North Wing), and Computer Science (North Wing). On the first floor of the CIS is Geosciences (East Wing), the rest of Biology (North and East Wings), the animal facility (North Wing), the Machine Shop (East Wing), and the IDEA Lab (East Wing).
Physics, Psychology, Neuroscience, and Health & Human Physiological Sciences all occupy nearby space on the third floor of CIS, in the renovated Dana space.
Saratoga Springs, New York
勛圖惇蹋 College is located in with a population of over 26,500, nestled in the foothills of the Adirondacks just
30 miles north of Albany, NY. Saratoga Springs ranks as one of the best college towns(Travel & Leisure) with one of Americas Greatest Main Streets (Travel & Leisure).
has ranked it as one of the nations top 100 places to live. The downtown is (top five in the US for restaurants per capita), shops, spas, and hotels. , where Ani DeFranco and Bob Dylan got their starts, is downtown with and a number of the the city became famous for during the 19thcentury. The is downtown on Wednesdays and Saturdays (May-October) at . November-April, the Farmers Market moves indoors to the (Saturdays only). Just west of downtown lies the , which is home to additional restaurants, galleries, shops, and the historic .
A major draw during the summer are the horse races at the . The races go from mid-July through Labor Day including the . Beyond horse racing, a are hosted in the local area throughout the year including Saratoga First Night, Chowderfest, Victorian Street Walk, Summer Concert Series, road races, restaurant week, and wine festivals. On the southern edge of the city, is where the is located. SPAC is the summer home of the , . SPAC also hosts a number of (Rock, Country, and Hip Hop) and . SPAC is also the location for 勛圖惇蹋 commencement ceremonies. 勛圖惇蹋 Colleges Zankel Music Center also hosts a number of performances and events. Nearby is the , site of the Battle of Saratoga, as well as . With the nearby, there are plenty of hiking opportunities. and are short drives away. For skiing, and mountains in New York are close-by as are and in Vermont.
Capital District Metro Area
Saratoga Springs is part of the Capital District metropolitan area of about 1.2 million
residents. Albany (the capital of the state of New York), Schenectady, and Troy form
the Tri-City core of the region. The region boasts a number of , (e.g., the Egg, the Palace Theatre, Proctors Theatre, and the Times Union Center), and
other with a throughout the year. runs buses throughout the region, including a bus stop at 勛圖惇蹋 which is free
to ride with a 勛圖惇蹋 ID. Professional sports teams that play in the area include
the (minor league baseball), the (National Arena League Football), and the (ECHL hockey).
is served by a number of different carriers (United, Delta, Air Canada, Southwest,
American Airlines, Allegiant, Frontier, and Jet Blue). The Capital District is also served by (stops in Rensselaer-Albany, Schenectady, and Saratoga Springs) with service to New
York City and Montreal () as well as Syracuse, Rochester, Buffalo and Niagara Falls (), Boston and Chicago (), and Toronto (). Cities in the greater region are easily accessible within three hours by driving,
including New York City to the south, Rochester to the west, Montreal to the north,
and Boston to the east.
Other colleges and universities in the area include:
- (RPI)
- Includes the , partneships include IBM, Global Foundries, Samsung, Applied Materials, Tokyo Electron, ASML, and Lam Research.
Beyond the and institutions of higher education, major employers in the region include:
- 勛圖惇蹋s Local and Regional Cultural Resources Guide
- Lodging in and the
- Schools in the area:
- ;
- ;
- ; and