Carlos CastilloChavez - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 34
About This Presentation
Title:

Carlos CastilloChavez

Description:

Carlos CastilloChavez – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:51
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 35
Provided by: carlos246
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Carlos CastilloChavez


1
Underrepresented Minorities in Mathematics
AAAS 2005 Annual Meeting, Washington D.C.
  • Carlos Castillo-Chavez
  • Joaquin Bustoz Jr. Professor
  • Arizona State University
  • February 20, 2005

2
Mathematics Ph.D. Degrees Awarded by US
Institutions
3
Ph.D. Degrees Awarded to US MinoritiesAmerican
Mathematical Association Data
4

5
(No Transcript)
6

7

8
Data Interpretation on Mathematics
  • 9-11 has had no impact on foreign recruitment. In
    fact this population seems to be increasing.
  • Number of Ph.D.s seems to be stabilizing around
    1000
  • Drecreases in the population of US citizens seem
    to be stopping (NSFs VIGRE, AGEP, IGERT?)

9
Underrepresented Minorities Data
  • Asian-Americans patterns are becoming strikingly
    similar to those of traditionally
    underrepresented groups
  • Trends for women in general seem stable (no
    growth) and
  • Numbers fopr underrepresented minorities are
    extremely small (men and women)

10
Some Explanations
  • Students prefer to go to do something else
    (business, medical school, etc.)
  • Huge paying jobs in industry
  • Lack of a critical mass prevents recruitment
  • Presidents Summers explanation

11
Additional reasons
  • Federal efforts -NSFs LS-Alliance for Minority
    Participation - are working. So what happens to
    these students?
  • US universities focus on general, that is, not
    specialized training while countries in Asia,
    Europe and Latin America do not.
  • Initial conditions are naturally extremely
    different-making foreign students more
    attractive.
  • Foreign students can produce immediately and
    this benefits faculty(publications, prestige,
    etc.)

12
More Reasons
  • Recruitment of Minorities - has been left to
    minorities or to special diversity offices with
    limited vision and power.
  • University offices in charge of diversity are in
    the hands of non faculty or undistinguised
    minority faculty (Vice provost for diversity or
    similar appointments are non-prestige
    appointments)
  • Faculty has no incentives to recruit and train
    American students, particularly, underrepresented
    minorities or women.
  • Training and funding of US students while is a
    costlier enterprise--equivalent to that of
    drafting basketball projects.

13
Current Efforts
  • Brave efforts by individuals often die with their
    retirement or relocation.
  • - Richard Tapia, William I. Velez, Joaquin
    Bustoz Jr. (deceased in 2003) and others
  • Efforts are seen as outside the departments or
    colleges functions, missions and goals
  • Lack of prestige on mentorship activities -
    despite efforts by NSF

14
MTBI
Mathematical and Theoretical Biology
Institute REU Programs can work ASU/Los Alamos
National Laboratory
15
Focus
  • Support sequential research opportunities mostly
    for underrepresented minorities (graduates and
    undergraduates) interested in the applications of
    mathematics to biology or related fields
  • Legitimate research experiences in applied
    mathematics, particularly in computational and
    mathematical biology with top researchers
    involved full time.
  • Increase the number of underrepresented
    minorities who apply and are accepted in some of
    the best US graduate programs in applied
    mathematics or related fields.

16
NSF-Math Institute Type Activities
  • University of Michigan (Genomics Training Center)
    and Santa Fe Institute annual participation
    Workshops
  • Colloquia with distinguished speakers
  • Basic Sequence plus advanced sequence with yearly
    varying themes (special years)
  • Opportunity to return as undergraduate and/or
    graduate student to participate in special year
    programs.
  • University partnerships Universityof Arizonas
    and University of New Mexicos Mathematics
    Departments
  • International undergraduate and graduate
    participants

17
MTBI DATA 1996-2004
18
(No Transcript)
19
(No Transcript)
20
(No Transcript)
21
Nine Years of MTBI Results
  • Since 1996 MTBI has mentored 232 undergraduates.
  • Approximately 12 Latinos in graduate school per
    year (15 total underrepresented minority
    students)
  • Since 1996 MTBI students have produced 89 papers,
    each years papers are published as technical
    reports--many published articles.

22
MTBI 1996
23
MTBI 2003
24
SUMS/MTBIs Year Round
Institute for Strengthening Understanding of
Mathematics and Science (SUMS) and MTBI Three
White House Awards for Mentorship Changes at ASU
in 2004 alone.
25
  • ABITuMath- International School of Mathematical
    Modeling
  • 6 SUMS/MTBI Institute students majoring in
    Mathematics and Engineering attended the
    ABITuMath Seminar in Munich, Germany and
    Novacella, Italy from September 25- October 5,
    2004 with funds received from the National
    Science Foundation (NSF).
  • Students participated in mathematical seminars
    with other students from Europe and the United
    States

26
Louis Stokes Alliance for Minority Participation
(LSAMP) Students
Joined ASUs Mathematics Graduate Program in 2004
27
SUMS/MTBI Research Professors
Priscilla Greenwood, Emeritus, UBC, Canda
Karl P. Hadeler, Emeritus, Tuebingen, Germany
28
Some Data on Impact
29
Cornell University
  • Sixteen MTBI alumni in graduate programs in
    applied mathematics, biometry, statistics and
    theoretical and applied mechanics
  • Nearly 100 retention
  • Five Ph.D.s to underrepresented minorities from
    this group in 2005.
  • First ever Ph.D. in biometry to an
    underrepresented minority
  • First ever Ph.D. in statistics to an
    underrepresented minority

30
  • Mexican President Vicente Fox and his wife with
    all the Mexican Youth Prize awardees at Los
    Pinos (November 24, 2003)

31
Mathematics Department - University of Iowa
  • The State of Iowa has a population that includes
    about 4 underrepresented minorities
  • Graduate mathematics program - includes between
    20-25 underrepresented minorities-most MTBI
    alumni.
  • Full faculty involvement - serious efforts to
    institutionalize change
  • Why cant every department do this?

32
Mathematics Department - University of Iowa
33
Conclusions
  • Culture can be changed at State and Ivy League
    Institutions
  • It is possibly to massively award Ph,D.s in the
    mathematical sciences to underrepresented
    minorities
  • Funding is necessary and important--it should be
    long-term and awarded competitively. NSF should
    not have its funding cut in this area.
  • There are clear measures of success retention
    and Ph.D.s awarded.
  • Efforts should be led by faculty with active
    well-recognized research programs and funding
    should be provided accordingly
  • Current situation unacceptable and easily
    addressed if increasing diversity becomes a
    national priority.

34
NSF Funding
  • Recent reports on NSF cuts will affect their
    human resources division
  • Unfortunately, some scientists have seen the
    mission of this division and those of research
    divisions as competing
  • They are closely and intimately related and
    cutting one will affect the other dramatically
  • Reduced funding will guarantee that the number of
    American students going into mathematics and the
    sciences will re-start its downward trend.
  • Diversity will only be a dream without the
    implementation of serious funding competitive
    programs,with appropriate funding, at the
    interface of research and education.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com