Meet Our Team

Our History: As part of a National Science Foundation grant, MIT developed software to display climate research data on a sphere for use in the classroom. They furthered development through a grant from Environment Solutions Initiative at MIT. Through these projects, we built a network of researchers, professors, and K12 teachers and enjoyed participation from 22 universities in 6 countries and 26 K12 schools. The projects also received letters of support from the following institutions: NASA • NOAA • Lorenz Center of MIT, • Princeton University.

Headshot of William S. Horn

William S. Horn

Ph.D.
Bill has a Ph.D. in Business and more than 3 decades of experience in information and knowledge management. Bill was a key member of the original NSF grant team that produced the software and educational network upon which Climate Globe was built. As President of Climate Globe, Bill is leading the development of this knowledge management platform and service.
Headshot of Lodovica C. Illari

Lodovica C. Illari

Ph.D.
Lodovica is a meteorologist who teaches large-scale dynamics and synoptic meteorology to graduate and undergraduate students. She is responsible for the Synoptic Laboratory, and her research interests include synoptic meteorology, severe weather, and atmospheric blocking. She is also involved in developing innovative teaching methods and outreach to the public and schools.
Portrait Tamara Ledley

Dr. Tamara Shapiro Ledley

STEM education consultant
Dr. Tamara Shapiro Ledley is a STEM education consultant, an En-ROADS Climate Ambassador, an Adjunct Professor at Bentley University, and Secretary of the Education Section of AAAS. She was a 2017 Harvard Advanced Leadership Initiative Fellow and served as a senior scientist and chair of the Center for STEM Teaching and Learning at TERC. She received her PhD from MIT in atmospheric and climate science and BS from the University of Maryland in astronomy. She led a research program in Earth system science and climate change at Rice University before joining TERC where she led the development of the award winning Earth Exploration Toolbook and EarthLabs projects. She co-founded and chaired the CLEAN Network and led the development of the award winning Climate Literacy and Energy Awareness Network (CLEAN) Collection of rigorously reviewed climate and energy educational resources. She is the 2013 American Geophysical Union's Excellence in Geophysical Education Awardee. She served as President and Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Earth Science Information Partners (ESIP). She currently serves on the CLEAN Network Leadership Board, the Board of Advisors of the Museum of Science Boston, and the Board of Directors of both the Blue Hill Observatory and Science Center, and Subject To Climate.
Headshot of Glenn R. Flierl

Glenn R. Flierl

Ph.D.
Glenn is an oceanographer concerned with the theory of geophysical vortices and jets. His interests include modeling the physics, chemistry, and biology of strongly nonlinear ocean eddies and meandering jets, such as the Gulf Stream. He is also investigating the physical and biological dynamics of the Georges Bank region. The tides, large-scale currents and jets, instability waves, and transient motions induced as offshore eddies impinge upon the continental shelf transport and mix the biological populations and may also, by upwelling nutrients or transporting material offshore, affect the growth and survival of plankton and fish. Professor Flierl joined the faculty at MIT after gaining his PhD in physics from Harvard.