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January 15, 2003
GAO Calls for Monitoring of Teacher-Education Projects In 1998, Congress created a program that offered...
January 15, 2003
Have a RUMBUS! Courtesy of the Boston University Student Chapter of the MAA Boston University will have its...
January 15, 2003
Free Copies of MAA Notes Volume on Calculus Reform Available In the mid-1980s, the mathematics...
January 13, 2003
NSF Beat: Opportunities at the National Science Foundation By Sharon Cutler Ross Scientists,...
January 13, 2003
Improving College and University Teaching A recent report from the National Research Council focuses on...
November 19, 2002
DoE to Establish“What Works Clearinghouse” The US Department of Education has chosen the Campbell...
November 11, 2002
According to an article in the Chronicle of Higher Education (Monday, November 11, 2002; online, for subscribers only,...
August 27, 2002
Call For Mathfest Session Organizers, 2003 and 2004 Minicourse Organizers The MAA Committee on...
August 27, 2002
The Ideology of Mathematics Education The American Enterprise Institute hosted a forum on mathematics...
August 27, 2002
NSF to Fund New Institutes The National Science Foundation announced that it will fund three new research...

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A Swiss Legacy: Mathematician Ferdinand Hassler and the U.S. Coast Survey

This year, mathematicians have been celebrating the 300th anniversary of the birth of Leonhard Euler. At the same time, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has been commemorating the 200th anniversary of its oldest ancestor agency, the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey. The first head of the Coast Survey was a mathematician named Ferdinand Rudolph Hassler (1770–1843).

MAA FOCUS: On Being a Mathematical Citizen

By Lynn Arthur Steen

Note: This article is an excerpt from Lynn A. Steen's Leitzel Lecture given at MathFest. The full text of the lecture can be found here.

Discoveries + Breakthroughs: Programming with Alice

The demand for computer programmers remains high, yet the number of undergraduates majoring in the subject has been on a downward spiral for the past seven years. A new visual programming language, called "Alice," aims to attract kids to the field of computer science at a young age. Developed by computer scientists at Carnegie Mellon University, "Alice" uses three-dimensional figures placed in a storyline instead of the usual numbers, letters, and symbols of a standard programming language.

Discoveries + Breakthroughs: Using Game Theory to Match Kidneys

In the United States, about 4,000 people in need of kidney transplants die each year because of the slow process of matching patients and donors. Now, a new computer program developed by researchers at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) could speed kidney exchange, saving lives.

Now Available: 2006 Annual Survey of the Mathematical Sciences (Final Report)

The last of three reports of the 2006 Annual Survey of the Mathematical Sciences is now available. Prepared by Polly Phipps, James W. Maxwell, and Colleen A Rose, the report gives information about faculty size, departmental enrollments, majors, and graduate students for departments of mathematical sciences in four-year colleges and universities in the United States.

2006 Annual Survey of the Mathematical Sciences—First and Second Reports

The First Report of the 2006 Annual Survey of the Mathematical Sciences, which presents salary data for faculty members in U.S. departments of mathematical sciences in four-year colleges and universities, has been published. It also gives a broad picture of 2005-06 new doctoral recipients from U.S. departments in the mathematical sciences, including their employment status in fall 2006.

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