Dr. John Young elected an Honorary Member of the Nova Scotia Institute of Science

John has short grey hair and wears a grey collared shirt. He leans on a railing

The Faculty of Science at Saint Mary’s is pleased to celebrate that Dr. John Clilberd O'Connor Young, Professor Emeritus, has been elected an honorary member of the Nova Scotia Institute of Science (NSIS), for his contributions to mathematics and chemistry over 75 years.

Dr. John Young began teaching chemistry at Saint Mary’s in 1970 after working in industry for 15 years. He retired in 1995 and was named professor emeritus. He holds a PhD from Imperial College at the University of London and an MBA from New York University. Dr. Young specialized in teaching environmental, inorganic, and physical chemistry courses and laboratory computerization.

Dr. Young’s many accomplishments include pioneering a computer-linked chemistry teaching lab at Saint Mary’s, many provincial, national, and international industry roles, and academic leadership positions at Saint Mary’s. His recent publications include “An Enhanced Colorimetric Integrated Rate Procedure for Determining Kinetic Reaction Order Values” (2024) and “Chemistry and the Calculus” (2024).

As just the fifth scientist to receive this honour, Dr. Young joins Dr. Arthur MacDonald, Dr. Mary Anne White, Dr. Jeffrey Dahn, and Dr. Zoe Lucas in NSIS’s group of Honorary Members.

Read more on the NSIS website.