Professor Carl R. Berman, Jr.
Carl R.
Berman,
Jr., Ph.D. is Collegiate Professor at University of Maryland
University College.
Carl spent 5 years in the US Navy and 25 years in the NOAA Commissioned
Corps,
working as an oceanographer, hydrographer, pollution ecologist, and
fisheries biologist for the US Government.
He earned his Ph.D. in Marine Science from the College of William and
Mary
in 1983 while on active duty. During his NOAA career he served on three
ships,
the last of which was the Albatross IV, out of Woods Hole, MA, which he
commanded, and as a project manager with the Intergovernmental
Oceanographic
Commission (of UNESCO, Paris, France) where he was the coordinator for
the
IGOSS project. While at UNESCO/IOC, he was also the manager for the
Indian
Ocean and Southern Ocean programs. In addition, he was part of a team
that
taught an annual seminar at the World Maritime University (Malmo,
Sweden),
on the scientific basis for the international marine pollution
conventions.
His online teaching activities include marine biology, general biology,
meteorology, geology, environmental change, physical science, and
computer
science. He has also served as an in-class lecturer for biology,
geology,
polar history, and physics. In addition, he presented several talks on
Polar
Exploration to the Life Long Learning Program at the University of
Texas. He
married Joyce Gioia, a Professional
Speaker and Futurist, in December of
2009. They live in Austin, TX. His interests include RV travel, reading,
cooking, music, photography, writing, and riding his
“trike”.
Read his LinkedIn
Profile.