JD

Joanne Dooley

Joanne Dooley has served as a Police Officer at Morton College since February 2011, where responsibilities include enforcing laws and ensuring a safe environment. In addition to law enforcement, Joanne has been actively involved in multiple volunteer roles since August 2012, including assisting with environmental education at the Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum and visitor orientation at the Adler Planetarium. Previous experience encompasses security and safety roles at entities such as the Forest Preserve District of Cook County and Brookfield Zoo, alongside a brief stint as a Resource Management Intern. Joanne holds a Master of Arts in Zoology/Animal Biology from Miami University and a Bachelor of Arts in Environmental Science from Carthage College.

Location

Lyons, United States

Links

Previous companies


Org chart

No direct reports

Teams

This person is not in any teams


Offices


Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum

The Chicago Academy of Sciences/Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum serves as an urban gateway to the world of nature and science. The mission of the Academy and its Museum is to create a positive relationship between people and nature through collaborations, education, research and collections, exhibits, and public forums that foster urban connections to our region’s nature and science. Our vision is to be the leading voice on urban ecology and sustainability as it relates to the Midwest/Great Lakes region. Established in 1857, the Chicago Academy of Sciences has been educating the public about nature and science for over 159 years, making us Chicago’s oldest Museum. In 1999, the Academy established the Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum to serve as its new permanent home, amidst the abundant urban wildlife of Lincoln Park and the shore of Lake Michigan. Since its opening, the Nature Museum has had more than two million visitors, including over 308,000 in 2015, allowing us to maintain our place as the 6th largest museum in Chicago. The Chicago Academy of Sciences has a rich history of leading science education through outreach, exhibits, and conservation initiatives, and the Nature Museum proudly continues that tradition of leadership. Each year, the Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum provides over 76,000 educational contact hours through K-12 science education programs reaching students, primarily from underserved schools and communities. Through our outreach programs and on-site workshops, the Museum also provides teacher professional development to more than 1,700 teachers annually, as well as teacher training, curriculum, and material support to the schools and communities with the greatest need.


Employees

51-200

Links