Jennifer J. Quinn | |
---|---|
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Williams College (BA) University of Illinois Chicago (MA) University of Wisconsin-Madison (PhD) |
Known for | Combinatorics |
Awards | MAA Haimo Award MAA Beckenback Book Award MAA president (2021–2022) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Mathematics |
Institutions | University of Washington Tacoma |
Doctoral advisor | Richard Anthony Brualdi |
Jennifer J. Quinn is an American mathematician specializing in combinatorics, and professor of mathematics at the University of Washington Tacoma. She sits on the board of governors of the Mathematical Association of America, and is serving as its president for the years 2021 and 2022. [1] From 2004 to 2008 she was co-editor of Math Horizons. [2]
Quinn went to Williams College as an undergraduate, graduating in 1985. She earned a master's degree from the University of Illinois at Chicago in 1987, and completed her doctorate at the University of Wisconsin–Madison in 1993. [2] [3] Her dissertation, Colorings and Cycle Packings in Graphs and Digraphs, was supervised by Richard A. Brualdi. [4]
She taught at Occidental College until 2005, when she gave up her position as full professor and department chair to move with her husband, [2] biologist Mark Martin, [5] to Washington. She became a part-time lecturer, and executive director of the Association for Women in Mathematics, until earning a faculty position at Tacoma in 2007. [2]
Quinn won a Distinguished Teaching Award from the Mathematical Association of America in 2001, [5] and the Deborah and Franklin Tepper Haimo Award for Distinguished College or University Teaching of Mathematics of the association in 2007. [2] [6]
Quinn's book with Arthur T. Benjamin, Proofs that Really Count: The Art of Combinatorial Proof (2003) won the CHOICE Award for Outstanding Academic Title of the American Library Association [7] and the Beckenbach Book Prize of the Mathematical Association of America. [8]
In 2018, Quinn was elected an officer-at-large member of the board of directors of the Mathematical Association of America (MAA) [9] . In 2020, Quinn joined the board of directors of the MAA as president-elect. Her term as president began in 2021. [10] In 2022 she will become a fellow of the Association for Women in Mathematics, "For her outstanding achievements as a teacher, mentor, leader, expositor, and editor; for her pioneering service as AWM executive director; and for continued service as AWM volunteer and supporter." [11]
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Proofs That Really Count: the Art of Combinatorial Proof is an undergraduate-level mathematics book on combinatorial proofs of mathematical identies. That is, it concerns equations between two integer-valued formulas, shown to be equal either by showing that both sides of the equation count the same type of mathematical objects, or by finding a one-to-one correspondence between the different types of object that they count. It was written by Arthur T. Benjamin and Jennifer Quinn, and published in 2003 by the Mathematical Association of America as volume 27 of their Dolciani Mathematical Expositions series. It won the Beckenbach Book Prize of the Mathematical Association of America.