stories

I admit this is a stretch as an illustration, but one of my amazing Calculus 2 students made a sort of story out of our study of lines and planes in space… Way to go Delaney!

Math needs more stories. All kinds of stories: about where ideas come from and what they mean; about the people who do math–how, why, and where they came from; about the beautiful and messed up parts of the community, and how these are and are not changing. Stories are the connective tissue of a body of ideas, essential to making these many theorems into a community. The kinds of stories we hear and the people who tell them influence how we imagine and understand this community, and ourselves in relation to it.  That’s why math needs more stories–because so many of the stories we hear come from voices and are about people similar to those that have been dominant in math for hundreds of years. If we want a broader, fairer, more inclusive mathematics, we need to make a point to hear everyone’s stories.

In some ways, stories are the whole point of this blog–we share our stories as early career mathematicians to connect with others who are, will be, or were early career mathematicians themselves.  However, I confess that I’m more interested in other people’s stories than my own.  In one part of my dream life I would be a sort of mathy Studs Terkel, interviewing people about their lives and their reflections on mathematics.  I probably need to get tenure before I can start spending too much time on that. Luckily, there are other people out there doing a great job of gathering stories.  You may have gotten the same email I did from the AMS yesterday about two new books of stories about mathematicians: Limitless Minds: Interviews with Mathematicians, by Anthony Bonato, and Mathematicians: An Outer View of the Inner World, by Mariana Cook.  These look great, and I just impulse bought them (when I’m going to have time to read them, who knows).  Probably the right choice would have been to ask my library to buy them so that everyone at my institution could read them… okay, now that I think about it, I will probably do that after I get done writing this blog.

There’s actually a different upcoming event that prompted me to write this blog, though: the AMS and Story Collider are collaborating on a storytelling event about the experiences of early career mathematicians at the this year’s Joint Mathematics Meetings! To quote from a call for submissions:

On January 17, 2019 at 8pm The Story Collider, a nonprofit organization dedicated to sharing stories about how science shapes our lives, will host a special edition of their live show at the Joint Mathematics Meetings, in partnership with the American Mathematical Society. The theme of the show is influences on early career mathematicians.

The show will be recorded and stories may be considered for airing on The Story Collider podcast. If you are curious or would like some inspiration, read more at https://www.storycollider.org/submissions or browse The Story Collider podcast archive at http://soundcloud.com/the-story-collider.

Aaaaa! I’m so excited about this.  I considered submitting a story idea, but, as usual, I couldn’t think of anything about my own story that would be super interesting.  Looking back, though, I realize that’s what everybody thinks.  Imagining those words from someone else, I would tell them that they were wrong–each of our stories is probably way more interesting than we think it is.  In any case, I am looking forward to the event, and I hope that this happens again.  If so, I will suck it up and try to contribute.

Perhaps even more exciting than this one event is a new AMS fund for early career mathematicians. As Nancy Hoffman of the AMS explains, “The impetus for this event comes from the building of a new endowed fund at the AMS – The Next Generation Fund. This fund is dedicated to supporting early career mathematicians now and for years to come. To help build awareness of this new resource and our fundraising efforts, we want to shine a light on stories about how each generation of mathematicians affects the next.”

I love this idea.  I don’t know yet what projects this fund will support, but this got me thinking–what do early career mathematicians need the most?  What did help, or would have helped, me more than anything in my first years out of the PhD?  I think my number one answer is community. Leaving behind my graduate school friends and connections, and everyone else that I cared about in that place, I felt extremely alone.  It was an adventure, and I met lots of great people and formed connections around the world, but it was (and continues to be, sometimes) pretty lonely.  And looking for jobs (over and over again) can be a really devastating experience–it’s all the fun of repeated rejection, with the spice an intense sense that you are not good enough and never will be, and a dash of having no idea where you’ll live or how you’ll make a living in a few months. How can a fund help people with these feelings of rootlessness, disconnection, and anxiety?  Maybe helping people find a network in their new communities, or using the funds to foster local or ongoing collaborations?  Maybe a giant party where everyone on the job market can get together and nobody is allowed to talk about job applications or interviews?  I don’t know.  But I am looking forward to finding out, and it reminds me to send out encouraging thoughts to all of you who are applying for jobs at this time of year.  You’re killing it!  Keep it up!  You have all of my hope and cheers.

What would you do with a fund to support early career mathematicians?  Let me know in the comments.  And happy Thanksgiving!

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SK Day 2018

Another fall break, another Sonya Kovalevsky Day at Hood. I’ve written about this before, but it’s a big deal for us and we’re proud to have pulled off another successful event. This year we brought another few dozen local high school girls to campus to learn about math and careers in math and related fields.

SK Day Participants. Photo courtesy of Tommy Riggs

The girls spend the morning attending two of four workshops. This year Carol Jim in our Computer Science department ran a workshop on Python Turtle, an introductory programming environment based on Logo. Which, if you happen to be about my age, is about as pleasant a descent into nostalgia as you can get. Our department chair Ann Stewart got the students playing with ratios and irrational numbers on monochords, former Hood professor and current NSA mathematician Gwyn Whieldon taught students about South American mathematical history, and Hood chemistry professor Dana Lawrence talked about math in the sciences, and what’s in a mole.

In the afternoon our students ate lunch with the girls and answered their questions on math and what college is like, one of our seniors gave a presentation on the life of Sonya Kovalevksy, and we concluded with a panel discussion from local women in math-affiliated careers.

We had generous sponsorship from PNC Bank and US Silica, with additional financial and other assistance from Frederick County Public Schools.

Van Nguyen, Me (plus epsilon), and Jill Tysse. Photo courtesy of Tommy Riggs.

I didn’t have a ton to contribute this year, to be honest – at 8 months pregnant I didn’t want to take on too much responsibility in case things got going early. But the other organizers, Jill Tysse and Van Nguyen, made all the planning look easy. And I picked up the donuts and coffee.

We had one new addition this semester: an essay contest for a generous Hood scholarship from our admissions department. They’d been looking for ways to get departments more involved with admissions, and were dangling scholarships for any departments who could figure out how to use them. We didn’t want to make the day itself into a competition, since that seemed counter to the spirit of SK Day, but we thought an essay contest would work nicely. We look forward to selecting winners in a month or two.

Jill wrote a great article for our local MAA section newsletter on how to run your own SK Day – pages 8-10. She covers everything from big-picture planning, to funding, to logistics. It’s a lot of work, but a valued tradition for us. It’s great exposure for Hood and the math department, helps to broaden the mathematical horizons of local girls at a time when many start to drift away from math, it boosts our students resumes and our dossiers, and it’s pretty fun too!

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Building Locality

My first three years out of graduate school, when I was in visiting positions, I was moving a lot and didn’t have much extra energy to dig into the communities where I lived. I made some great friends, but we all knew that I would be leaving, and some people understandably didn’t really want to bother with me. I still had Wyoming license plates on my car, because it was easier to just leave it registered there, with my parents. In that part of my life, I got much closer to my math friends and came to identify much more with the mathematical community than any geographic community. However, one of the great perks and biggest changes of being in a long-term position is the chance that I now have to engage with and invest in my geographic communities in long-term ways. In Philadelphia, this led me to talk to people on the train, to do pre-GED tutoring at Community Learning Center, and to go to seminars at all the nearby colleges. It took me three years to feel really at home there, and then I moved again. My new home in Colorado Springs is very different, and I’m still figuring out how to get involved here. Sometime last winter I started on a personal mission of intentionally befriending the some of the awesome people I meet. I started going to all the faculty happy hours, and I joined a SWARG (Scholarly Writing and Research Group). I bought a house in town, which is a whole different kind of investment in the community. I’m still working on engaging with the local mathematical community and the non-academic world. This is harder because service to the college is a not-insubstantial part of my job now, and it’s easy to let service become my hobby and main form of “civic” engagement. I’ve been reaching out more recently, though.  In this post, I’m sharing what I did on one big day of engagement.  So welcome to my Saturday, September 29!

League of Women Voters State Annual Meeting

Zoe Frolik and me at the LWV Colorado annual meeting.

At 7 AM I picked up my student Zöe Frolik and drove to Denver. The reason for this trip began last fall, when I attended a wonderful Geometry of Redistricting workshop at the University of Wisconsin Madison. It was part of a national series organized by Moon Duchin and the Metric Geometry and Gerrymandering Group, based at Tufts University, and organized locally by Jordan Ellenberg. The workshop got me really fired up about how math can identify extreme gerrymanders and give people real tools to fight unfair redistricting. This led me to join the League of Women Voters, a non-partisan group founded in 1920 (just six months before the 19th amendment finally granted women the right to vote), which works for voter education and registration and has been involved in bringing many lawsuits challenging highly partisan districting maps across the country.

I’ve met some great people in my local league, and learned a lot about local and national issues. I also set the League up with a couple of exceptional Colorado College students, who helped them build a student section of their website, part of a big push to reach out to a younger base. One of these students, Zöe, is a Math and Political Science double major, and she has been working with me on parts of her senior project for Political Science about different ways of measuring the fairness of Colorado’s congressional and state legislative district map. The local league has been very excited about her project, and kindly invited us to attend their state meeting. Colorado has two measures related to redistricting reform on the ballot this fall, and the league is conducting an educational campaign about gerrymandering and the importance of fair redistricting. The meeting covered these measures, as well as a really inspiring training in diversity, equity, and inclusion. We had lunch with some very cool women from our local league, and then took off for the next event of the day (see below). After the meeting, Zöe wrote an article about some mathematical measures of fairness for the league’s local newsletter.

Members of the League of Women Voters of the Pikes Peak Region at the state meeting: Julie Ott, me, Zoe Frolik, Lineah Davey, Pauleta Terven, Sharon LaMothe, June Waller, and Mollie Williams.

Front Range Number Theory Day at Colorado State

Next step: North on I-25 to Fort Collins, my old grad school stomping grounds. Living in Colorado is great. I’ve moved to Colorado four times in my life, so clearly I like it a lot. I mean, my biggest complaint is that people here are maybe a little too in love with living in Colorado (you see a lot of people here wearing the Colorado flag on almost all articles of their clothing), but there’s a reason people are so rabid about the place. That said, it is not (yet) considered the center of the mathematical world. There are plenty of mathematicians in the region, but the population is spread out enough that, outside of the larger universities, it can be hard to connect with a research group in any very focused area. I thought that this wouldn’t be any problem for me, because I did go to grad school here and I have some great connections in the region. It’s been hard to carve out the time to go to seminars that are two hours away, though. Certainly it is not impossible to bridge the distance, though, and there are several people working to connect number theorists in Colorado. This summer, I took my research students to Colorado State University (CSU) to visit REU students working with Rachel Pries and Patrick Shipman there. On the day I’m describing, CSU post doc Ozlem Ejder and University of Colorado Boulder grad student (and my former CC research student) Hanson Smith organized a student-focused Front Range Number Theory Day at CSU. They invited some local speakers and some from further away to give talks that ranged from undergraduate-friendly to advanced, graduate student-focused research talks. Kate Stange gave a particularly cool talk about Apollonian circle packings. We brought a van of students from CC, and my student Sam Kottler presented on his summer work in error correcting codes with locality (hence my private joke in the title here…). Front Range Number Theory Day is planned to be a twice yearly event, and I’m really excited to keep going, bringing students, and being part of building something great where I am. I hope that I can even host it at CC sometime in the next few years.

My local roots and branches: part of my math extended family at Front Range Number Theory Day!  Front: Eric Moorhouse  and Hanson Smith,   Back: Jeff Achter, Rachel Pries, me, Zoe Frolik, Sam Kottler, Bob Kuo, and Jerrell Cockerham.

Being close to my college/grad school has made it easier to connect my math past and present. At the Front Range Number Theory Day, I got to arrange a sort of “math family” picture, with some of the people who introduced me to the math that I still love today, and students that I have gotten to pass that on to.  Eric Moorhouse was my first Abstract Algebra professor at University of Wyoming. Rachel Pries was my thesis advisor, and Jeff Achter taught me four semesters of Algebraic Geometry at CSU.  Hanson Smith and Sam Kottler were my thesis students at Colorado College.  Jerrell Cockerham worked on summer research with me this summer, and Zöe Frolik has been working on the gerrymandering project and was in my Abstract Algebra class last year.  Bob Kuo is the paraprofessional at CC this year. We haven’t worked on any algebra together, but I feel a certain kinship based on the fact that we both have driven many vans full of students to math events.

 

So that was one day of working to connect locally. I was tired after all this (especially after I stayed up late with some old friends in Fort Collins), but it was really worth it. My goal for this week is to bring it even closer to home—I am going to the seminar at University of Colorado Colorado Springs for the first time this week! Any thoughts on how you dig in locally? Good ideas on stuff I should do? Let me know in the comments!

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