The Ohio State Graduate Program in Mathematics is inviting applications to both its MMS and PhD degree programs. We are expecting to recruit a total of about 30 students for Autumn 2011. Below a few highlights that your graduating undergraduate majors and Masters students may be interested in.
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Ohio State Graduate Program
I received the following email today --- you can't beat a $5 application fee (well, you can, if they just waive it... but $5 ain't bad). And it's pretty unusual to get full funding as a Master's student.
Friday, October 15, 2010
University of Rochester Newsletter
The University of Rochester Computer Science department publishes a newsletter called "Multicast" (this is a computer science term). Sometimes these newsletters are interesting to read to see what kinds of things are going on in other academic institutions.
Notre Dame ESTEEM program
Last year Notre Dame introduced this interesting new program for science and math students. It seems that it is doing OK, because they just sent me an email advertising it again. It's quite a fascinating idea: take the "technical" students and put them through a program that is intended to get them to become entrepreneurs. If that sounds like fun, I'd encourage you to look into it some more.
SMU Graduate Program in Computational and Applied Mathematics
We have had several students accepted into SMU's Ph.D. program. They seem to really like our math majors! If you're interested in applied mathematics, this is a great program. You can get more information at their department's website: http://www.smu.edu/math.
Ford Foundation Fellowship Programs
From the flyer they sent me: "Ford Foundation Fellowships are designed to increase the diversity of the nation's college and university faculties." They give out fellowships for graduate studies that would lead to a teaching and research career at the college or university level. You can find more information at http://national-academies.org/fellowships.
Student Membership in Professional Societies
Professional societies exist to help push a particular field or discipline forward, through advocacy, communication & publications, and putting on professional meetings. For students, they are often a good way to see what's "going on" in a particular profession --- what are the members in the field thinking about, working on, etc. This is especially true because they are usually have student membership rates that are quite reasonable.
I recently received notices about these student memberships from two societies: the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics (SIAM) and the IEEE/IEEE Computer Society. You can read about their student membership opportunities at http://www.siam.org and http://www.computer.org. Just look for a link to "membership" or "join now" to see what the student memberships cost and what kind of benefits you'd receive.
Don't forget about the American Mathematical Society (AMS), the Mathematical Association of America (MAA), American Statistical Association (ASA), and the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), all of which have student membership rates.
Thursday, September 23, 2010
NSF Research Abroad for Graduate Students
The National Science Foundation has a fairly new "East Asia & Pacific Summer Institutes" (EAPSI) program, which pays expenses plus a stipend for science, engineering, and mathematics graduate students to spend a summer doing research in (where else?) East Asia and the Pacific (Australia, China, Japan, Korea, New Zealand, Singapore, and Taiwan).
You can get more information about the program at www.nsf.gov/eapsi or www.nsfsi.org.
You can get more information about the program at www.nsf.gov/eapsi or www.nsfsi.org.
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