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Related: About this forumPhillip Geissler, beloved UC Berkeley professor, dies at 48 while hiking in Utah
Phillip Geissler, beloved UC Berkeley professor, dies at 48 while hiking in Utah
Sam Whiting
July 28, 2022
Updated: July 29, 2022 12:26 a.m.
Professor Phillip Geissler teaches chemistry at UC Berkeley in 2011.
Provided by Michael H. Barnes 2011
Chem 1A is the introductory chemistry course at UC Berkeley designed to identify the freshmen who have the talent to continue on a pre-med pathway in a semester-long pressure cooker. But whenever Professor Phillip Geissler taught it, students could get at least a moment of relief when he brought in his guitar.
Standing before 500 students as if the Pimentel auditorium were a concert hall, hed sing catchy chem-humor tunes, with titles like The Mole Song, and Acids and Bases. Hed even bring in a professional singer as a guest performer. It was the kind of extra effort that won Geissler the top campus awards in teaching. ... Students would often say that he was the nicest professor they ever met at Cal, said Lucie Liu, a former graduate student in chemistry who was selected to the statistical mechanics dream-team known as the Geissler Group.
In mid-July, he made a detour to Moab, Utah for a day or two of hiking on his way back from Colorado, where he gave a lecture at the Telluride Research Center. Geissler was aware of heat danger and very careful, said his partner Lauren Nakashima, so he set early in the morning of July 17. By 8 am., when he was at the visitor center, it was already 80 degrees, headed to triple digits.
When he did not check in Nakashima at home in Oakland, a search was mounted. His body was found near a trail head two days later. The cause of death is pending an autopsy, but it was suspected to be a heart attack or other sudden medical event, Nakashima said. He was 48. ... He was overdue for a big American road trip to the wide-open landscapes to see that southwest geologic splendor that he loved, said Rebecca Overacre, who described herself as life partner of Geissler, though he lives with Nakashima. It works for them.
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riversedge
(73,127 posts)usonian
(13,796 posts)We have lost too many people to the extreme heat, and lack of cellphone coverage in trails.
3catwoman3
(25,440 posts)I could have used a teacher like that for my intro to Chem course.
hunter
(38,931 posts)I remember hopeful premed classmates crashing and burning all around me. These were kids who were straight-A honors students in high school, valedictorians even, with a lot of pressure on them to be doctors, engineers, etc..
Generally the professors were wonderful teachers, but the courses themselves were brutal. After the first midterm you'd leave the lecture hall surrounded by shell-shocked over-achievers who knew they were going to get their first "B" or "C" in a class ever, or worse.
My physics professor was a wonderful teacher in every way. His office was always open, he was always friendly... but his exams were almost sadistic. There was no way anyone could pass them by rote memorization. If a student didn't know the stuff in their gut they floundered. It seemed a third of the class didn't make it through to the end of the year and that sort of attrition was institutional.
As someone who was never a straight-A honors student I wasn't traumatized by the experience and managed to muddle on through, finding joy in the occasional "B+" or "A-"
I'm happy with my bachelor's degree. My wife powered on beyond that.
This story makes me a little sad. I used to be the sort of person who hikes alone in the desert, overnight too. My wife, who is a much more practical person than I am, didn't like that, so I stopped. Was she right?