Student Evaluations Can’t be Used to Assess Professors
Sarah Yoseph2019-03-22T01:37:40-05:00Our research shows they’re biased against women. That means using them is illegal. Read more
Our research shows they’re biased against women. That means using them is illegal. Read more
Read doctoral student Meghan Malachi's article Qualified on the oscillating trends common to many graduate students when taking qualifying exams. Also find some great quotes and stories on her blog Just Click Like. Read the article
Black women hold only one percent of the full-time faculty roles on college campuses. EDGEr Veronica Hill featured as one of the mathematics professors awarded. Watch the video: http://wwlp.com/2017/09/21/6-african-american-professors-honored-for-work-in-higher-education/
Develop workplaces that tap everyone’s talents and best work. By Shelley Correll, Professor of Sociology at Stanford University. Watch the video here.
Dr. Malena I. Espanol earned her B.S. in mathematics from the University of Buenos Aires, Argentina, and M.S. and Ph.D. in mathematics from Tufts University. Her research interests are in applied and computational mathematics.
Dr. Pamela E. Harris earned her B.S. in mathematics from Marquette University, and M.S. and Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee. Her research interests are in algebra and combinatorics, particularly as these subjects relate to the representation theory of Lie algebras.
Dr. Emille Davie Lawrence earned her B.S. in mathematics from Spelman College and her Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of Georgia where her dissertation was in the field of braid groups.
Dr. Diaz Eaton earned her B.A. in Mathematics with a minor in Zoology and an M.A. in Interdisciplinary Mathematics, both from University of Maine, where she studied computational neurobiology.
Dr. Becky Hall earned her BS in Secondary Education in Mathematics from Western Connecticut State University (WCSU). She taught math at Newtown High School for five years, then earned her PhD in mathematics at Wesleyan University.
Dr. Christina Sormani earned her PhD from the Courant Institute in 1996 and went to Harvard for her first postdoc. During her second postdoc at Johns Hopkins, she married and had a child in 1999.