Hilbert College Logo
  • Info For
  • Search
  • Office Directory
Info For
  • Alumni
  • Parents
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Current Students
  • COVID-19
  • Online
    • Undergraduate Programs
    • Graduate Programs
  • About
    • Hilbert 2025 | Strategic Plan
    • Mission & Vision
    • Office of the President
    • Conferences & Events
    • News
    • Fast Facts
    • History & Traditions
    • Visiting Hilbert
    • Virtual Tour
    • Employment & Benefits
    • Consumer Disclosure
    • Notice of Non-Discrimination
    • Institutional Research & Assessment
    • Directory
    • Ten Things About Hilbert
    • State Authorization Reciprocity Agreement
    • Accreditation
  • Academics
    • Undergraduate Programs
    • Pre-Professional Programs
    • Master's Programs
    • Online Opportunities
    • Dual Enrollment Program
    • Advising
    • Summer Sessions
    • Student Services
    • Research
    • Library
    • Commencement
    • Value of Hilbert Education
    • Academic Catalog
    • Honors Program
    • Hilbert Blueprint
    • Academic Calendar
    • Academic Policies & Procedures
    • Liberal Learning Outcomes
    • Class Cancellations
    • Liberty Partnership Program
  • Admissions
    • Undergraduate Admissions
    • International Admissions
    • Graduate Admissions
    • Accepted Students
    • Schedule a Visit
    • Apply to Hilbert
    • Summer Sessions
  • Costs & Aid
    • Undergrad Financial Aid & Costs
    • Graduate Financial Aid & Costs
    • Making a Payment
    • Apply for a Student Loan
    • Financial Literacy Resources
    • Refund Policies
    • Financial Aid FAQs
    • Consumer Information
  • Student Life
    • Health & Wellness Center
    • Student Activities
    • Residence Life
    • Campus Safety
    • Campus Dining
    • Events Calendar
    • Diversity & Inclusion
    • Leadership
    • Campus Ministry
    • Counseling Center
    • Veterans
    • Student Services
    • Bookstore
    • Service Learning
    • New Student Orientation
    • Student Handbook
    • International Education
    • Army ROTC
  • Athletics
  • Alumni
    • Ways to Give
    • News & Updates
    • Events
  • Visits
Give Now
  • Home/
  • About/
  • News/
  • Hilbert Spotlights/
  • Jenelle Lukasik
Jenelle Lukasik, Associate Professor

Jenelle Lukasik, MA 
Department of Natural Math & Sciences

Faculty Profile: Jenelle Lukasik, MA

Jenelle Lukasik remembers how she got a police officer interested in mathematics. He was taking a statistics course, and she was talking about a Z-score: a measure of how far a data point is from the average. A high Z-score, she explained, indicates that something unusual might be happening.

After the class, the officer told her that he had been assigned to go through crime reports and highlight high Z-scores, without knowing what they meant. Now, he realized that they pointed to high-crime areas. “I just did what I was told, but now I understand,” he told her.

Making math accessible to students is a specialty for Lukasik, associate professor of mathematics at Hilbert College. The college doesn’t offer a math major or degree. Instead, she teaches math classes for students pursuing degrees in other fields.

Her goal is to equip them with mathematical tools they can use in their work and their daily lives. “I like to teach stuff that has practical applications to it,” she said. “That's where students start to see how cool math can be.”

Drawn to Teaching

Although Lukasik was good at math, growing up in Buffalo it was not her primary interest. She enjoyed reading, as well as dancing, tennis and playing the cello. “I like to do a lot of everything,” she said.

Another favorite pastime was teaching. When she learned something interesting at school, she would come home and try to teach it to her younger sister.

Friends, too, would ask her for math assistance, she recalled. “It was a subject I enjoyed, and I found I could explain it to others.”

When Lukasik went to a local college, her career goal was to teach high school math. She got a dual bachelor’s degree in math and adolescent education.

Going on to a master’s program, she opted for a math degree because it paid her tuition, in return for tutoring and teaching as a graduate assistant. She found, to her surprise, that she enjoyed instructing college students.

A former teacher from her high school who was now teaching at Hilbert encouraged her to apply for a part-time job there. A year later, in 2007, Lukasik went full time.

She’s been there ever since. “What I really wanted to do was help the students,” she said. “Moving over to a school like Hilbert, I could do that. I had small classes, and I could get to know my students.”

Practical Math

While getting her master’s degree, Lukasik was delighted to discover how diverse math could be. One of her favorite courses was knot theory, a branch of topology that studies mathematical surface models and various ways of turning them into knots.

At Hilbert, she says, most of her students won’t have much use for algebra or calculus. But many can use a course called Discrete Mathematics. Its concepts—such as set theory, functions and mathematical logic —are foundational to how computers operate.

“It’s not a programming course, but it teaches students how to deal with logic and set up steps to create a program,” she said. “It teaches them how to work in different number systems, such as binary. It connects to something they’re probably going to be doing, such as cybersecurity or computer science.”

She created another course called Mathematical Applications, in which students devise projects that use math in everyday life. One section deals with math and sports, while another applies math to health and fitness.

For a section on graph theory, students pick five places they visit on a regular basis. They use a variety of methods to analyze routes among those places and compare and contrast the results.

“They may find a more efficient route to do their daily errands,” Lukasik said. “It gives them an opportunity to create something for themselves and to see math in a different way.”

Different Styles for Different Students

Fundamental to Lukasik’s teaching philosophy is the concept of learning styles. “It’s about how you take in information,” she said.

One student may respond well to frequent quizzes, she explained, while another might learn better by doing hands-on projects. One might prefer listening to lectures while another may absorb concepts by doing practice problems.

“I try to make sure that my teaching style hits all those different learning styles,” she said. “There might be part of the lesson in which I am lecturing, but then there's going to be part of the lesson where they're working on practice problems, and there are going to be times when they're getting assessed on a project.” 

As she walks around a room, she observes how students are approaching their classwork. If one appears stuck, she’ll offer an explanation. “I can tell by their faces whether they’re getting it,” she said. “If they’re not getting it, I need to pivot and try to re-explain something in a new way. I find I’m continually learning new ways to explain things.”

After 16 years of teaching at Hilbert, Lukasik can’t think of a job she’d rather be doing. “A lot of people start teaching so they can get into administration,” she said. “I like being in the classroom. I like working with the students. I like moments when a student says to me, ‘That made sense when you explained it, and that’s never made sense to me before.”

Explore the Benefits of a Holistic Education

In today’s complex business world, employers value workers with a well-rounded education as well as expertise in a specific field. A student-centered and liberal arts-oriented institution like Hilbert College— and dedicated educators like Jenelle Lukasik—can prepare a student with general problem-solving and critical thinking skills, along with depth in areas like business management, cybersecurity, criminal justice, and forensic science. Discover how this holistic approach can prepare you for a rewarding career in a wide variety of occupations.

Recommended Readings

Humanities vs. Liberal Arts: How Are They Different? 
Unlocking the Value of a Liberal Arts Education 
What Is Liberal Studies?

Jenelle Lukasik, Associate Professor

Questions & Answer Session
With Jenelle Lukasik
Associate Professor of Mathematics

View Jenelle's Faculty Spotlight

What advice would you give to someone studying math for a non-math degree?

What advice would you give to someone studying math for a non-math degree?

Consider that math is not just algebra and calculus. Almost everything in our daily lives has some kind of mathematical underpinning to it. It’s sort of behind the scenes, but math touches it. That TV that you're watching wouldn't be possible without math. A musician is able to mix the beats of his song because he understands frequencies.

What are the most important skills employers are looking for?

What are the most important skills employers are looking for?

Basic problem-solving skills and critical thinking skills. Your employer is not going to ask you to factor numbers or anything like that, but they are going to want you to be able to work through an unfamiliar problem and figure out the steps to solve it.

Why should students take math at Hilbert College?

Why should students take math at Hilbert College?

We have small classes, and I can really get to know my students. I have the freedom to teach things that I wouldn't have gotten to teach in a traditional math curriculum. Students can start to see how math is actually applicable to them.

What math courses or topics are you most excited to teach?

What math courses or topics are you most excited to teach?

My favorite courses to teach are ones in which students can see applications for math. For example, for financial math, students pick a car price and they look at what the amounts would be under different loan scenarios, different interest rates, different amounts of time and different down payments.
  • Hilbert Spotlights
  • Jenelle Lukasik
  • Colleen Kumiega
  • Steven MacMartin
  • Andrew Hill
  • Carraugh Reilly Nowak
  • Jessica Hoffman
  • Faculty Appointments Fall 2023
  • Student Profile: Adyn Migliore
  • Apply Now

    Application forms, procedures and additional information

  • Schedule A Visit

    There are many ways to experience
    Hilbert for yourself

  • Request Info

    Learn more about the programs that interest you

Hilbert College Logo
  • Conference & Event Center
  • Campus Ministry
  • Title IX
  • Veterans
  • Careers
  • Diversity
  • Request a Transcript

For accessibility help, contact Debra McLoughlin at dmcloughlin@hilbert.edu or call (716) 926-8826.
For media inquiries, contact media@hilbert.edu.

Hilbert Wordmark Tagline and Footer 
5200 South Park Avenue
Hamburg, New York 14075
(716) 649-7900 | info@hilbert.edu | Privacy Policy

Monday - Thursday from 8:30am - 5:00pm
Friday from 8:30am - 4:30pm

 

  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
  • Flickr
  • Twitter
Students Faculty/Staff Blackboard Login