Jon M. Nese

Jon M. Nese

  • Associate Head, Undergraduate Program in Meteorology and Atmospheric Science
  • Teaching Professor in Meteorology
  • Weather World Host, Feature Writer & Producer
518 Walker Building
University Park, PA 16802
Phone: (814) 863-4076

Education:

  1. Ph.D, 1989 -- The Pennsylvania State University
  2. M.S., 1985 -- The Pennsylvania State University
  3. B.S., 1983 -- The Pennsylvania State University

Biography:

Dr.. Nese oversees the undergraduate program in Meteorology and Atmospheric Science, handling a variety of duties from advising and recruiting to retention and scheduling instructors for the program.

He teaches a variety of courses, including Introduction to Weather Analysis (Meteo 201), Synoptic Meteorology Laboratory (Meteo 411), Introductory Meteorology (Meteo 003), Forecasting Practicum (Meteo 415), and Professional Development in the Atmospheric Sciences (Meteo 491).

 Dr. Nese also oversees the Weather Communication Group which is responsible for the production of the Penn State Meteorology Department's weekday weather magazine show Weather World.  He provides regular features for the show on Wednesday evening in a segment called WxYz (WeatherWhys) - in 2015, he was awarded a Mid-Atlantic Emmy for WxYz with his colleague Marisa Ferger.  He also occasionally hosts the show and interviews Penn State faculty and prominent alumni.

Prior to joining the Penn State faculty, he was chief meteorologist at the historic Franklin Institute Science Museum in Philadelphia from 1998 to 2002. From 2002 to 2005, he was an on-air storm analyst at The Weather Channel.

Dr. Nese has co-authored two books: The Philadelphia Area Weather Book (with Philadelphia television meteorologist and Penn State alum Glenn Schwartz), which was awarded the 2005 Louis J. Battan Author’s Award from the American Meteorological Society; and a college-level introductory textbook A World of Weather: Fundamentals of Meteorology (with Penn State meteorologist Lee Grenci), now in its 6th edition.

 

Research Interests

Pennsylvania climatology, forecasting, weather communication, predictability and chaos theory, museum education.