Island research
For years, beginning in the late 1970s, Guber oversaw the Wallops Island course. As director, each year he interviewed more than 600 interested students for about 60 slots. Those selected students pulled from a diverse variety of disciplines traveled to the island to take part in a week of condensed coursework, followed by field and group work along the Wallops and Assateague coastlines.
The course was a chance to learn about coastal ecology and work with others outside of their disciplines, much like they would do in the field.
Brian Dade, 1978, mineral economics, Earth sciences said the course was an intense exposure to marine engineering, coastal oceanography, geology and ecology. He said the course encouraged students to design and conduct their own field studies, rather than simply handing them assignments. That process — and the chance to work with scientists and be exposed to the research — helped in his path to becoming a geoscientist. He returned to Penn State for his master’s degree, 1983, geology, and retired in 2016 as an associate professor of Earth sciences at Dartmouth.
“These were all hugely formative experiences for me, ones in which Professor Al Guber figured large as a dedicated educator, a dedicated scientist with broad-ranging interests, and a thoughtful mentor and ‘troop leader’ for his students,” Dade said.
Janet Kappmeyer, 1979 geosciences, remembers her first year at Penn State taking a course with Guber. She originally dreamed of majoring in music — driven by her love of the flute — but “fell back” on an interest in geosciences. Guber’s passion for the science solidified hers, and she changed her major to geology immediately.
“He just explained things so clearly and made all aspects of geology really interesting to me,” Kappmeyer said. “He spent a fair bit of time on plate tectonics, which I just found so incredible. And it was fairly early on in the acceptance of that theory.”
In that course, Guber showed pictures of some of the world’s most fascinating geological sites. One slide included Wallops Island, and that caught Kappmeyer’s attention. She made a note to apply for the Wallops program as soon as she was eligible, her sophomore year.
Her work at Wallops led to a career as an environmental consultant after working a brief time with Exxon’s offshore exploration group. About 15 years ago, she earned a degree in viticulture and enology from the University of California, Davis, and now works for Constellation Brands, a major beverage producer. Ironically, home winemaking is a hobby she and Guber shared.
Kappmeyer said she learned a lot during her Wallops experience. That’s something she had a chance to thank Guber for personally before his passing. One thing that stuck with her most was the concept of the knock-on effect. That’s when a seemingly small change to the environment can cascade down to create massive changes elsewhere.
At Wallops Island, an example of the knock-on effect they learned was when offshore jetties catch southward-bound sediment they rob the coastline to the south and create massive erosion. It’s similar to when an educator captures your attention and puts your life on a completely different career path. And the concept is something that drove her career, particularly focusing on the environmental impact of engineering projects.
“Everything is hyperconnected,” Kappmeyer said. “And when you perturb the system in one place, you can really force change in another place. I think, for me, that was probably the key takeaway. I mean, there were so many wonderful, little tidbits that we learned. But I think that overall overarching issue was really prevalent, at least for me as a physical scientist.”
Contributions to the Al Guber Program Fund will advance “A Greater Penn State for 21st Century Excellence,” a focused campaign that seeks to elevate Penn State’s position as a leading public university in a world defined by rapid change and global connections. With the support of alumni and friends, “A Greater Penn State” seeks to fulfill the three key imperatives of a 21st-century public university: keeping the doors to higher education open to hardworking students regardless of financial well-being; creating transformative experiences that go beyond the classroom; and impacting the world by serving communities and fueling discovery, innovation and entrepreneurship. To learn more about “A Greater Penn State for 21st-Century Excellence,” visit greaterpennstate.psu.edu.