Rhonda Hatcher

Last updated

Rhonda Lee Hatcher is an American mathematician whose research topics include analytic number theory and L-functions as well as topics in recreational mathematics. She is an emeritus associate professor of mathematics at Texas Christian University. [1]

Contents

Education and career

Hatcher graduated summa cum laude from the University of Colorado Boulder in 1980. [2] She earned her Ph.D. in 1988 from Harvard University. Her dissertation, Heights and L-Series, was supervised by Benedict Gross. [3] After completing her doctorate, she taught at St. Olaf College in Minnesota for three years before moving to Texas Christian. [2]

At Texas Christian, Hatcher served as the Faculty Athletics Representative from 1999 until 2023. She has also represented the Big 12 Conference in the National Collegiate Athletic Association Committee on Academics. Within the committee, she took a minority position against a proposed rule change to allow students with high grade point averages to transfer to other schools and maintain their athletic eligibility, arguing that the rule would disproportionately penalize African-American students. [4]

Book

With George T. Gilbert, she is the author of Mathematics Beyond the Numbers (Wiley, 2000; 2nd ed., Kendall Hunt, 2012). This is a mathematics textbook designed for use in liberal arts education. It covers topics mathematics through their applications, including voting systems, apportionment, genetics, opinion polls, scheduling, and cryptography. Its mathematical topics include probability and statistics, graph theory and combinatorial geometry, and number theory. [5]

Recognition

In 1998, Hatcher won the Deborah and Franklin Haimo Award for Distinguished College or University Teaching of Mathematics. [2] [6] The award announcement cited her excellent mathematics teaching at Texas Christian, her work helping high school teachers prepare to teach AP Calculus, and her summer programs which attracted undergraduates from other parts of the country to work with her on number theory, group theory, and graph theory. Some of the research from this program ended up being published in professional journals. [2]

Related Research Articles

The Deborah and Franklin Tepper Haimo Awards for Distinguished College or University Teaching of Mathematics are awards given by the Mathematical Association of America to recognize college or university teachers "who have been widely recognized as extraordinarily successful and whose teaching effectiveness has been shown to have had influence beyond their own institutions." The Haimo awards are the highest teaching honor bestowed by the MAA. The awards were established in 1993 by Deborah Tepper Haimo and named after Haimo and her husband Franklin Haimo. After the first year of the award up to three awards are given every year.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jennifer Quinn</span> American mathematician

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. From 2004 to 2008 she was co-editor of Math Horizons.

Joan Prince Hutchinson is an American mathematician and Professor Emerita of Mathematics from Macalester College.

Susan Renee Loepp is an American mathematician who works as a professor of mathematics at Williams College. Her research concerns commutative algebra.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Zvezdelina Stankova</span> American mathematician

Zvezdelina Entcheva Stankova is an American mathematician who is a professor of mathematics at Mills College and a teaching professor at the University of California, Berkeley, the founder of the Berkeley Math Circle, and an expert in the combinatorial enumeration of permutations with forbidden patterns.

Deborah Tepper Haimo (1921–2007) was an American mathematician who became president of the Mathematical Association of America (MAA). Her research concerned "classical analysis, in particular, generalizations of the heat equation, special functions, and harmonic analysis".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Annalisa Crannell</span> American mathematician

Annalisa Crannell is an American mathematician, and an expert in the mathematics of water waves, chaos theory, and geometric perspective. She is a professor of mathematics at Franklin & Marshall College.

Anne Lester Hudson is an American mathematician and mathematics educator. Her research specialty is the theory of topological semigroups; she is also known for her skill at mathematical problem-solving, and has coached students to success in both the International Mathematical Olympiad and the William Lowell Putnam Mathematical Competition. She is a professor emeritus at the Georgia Southern University-Armstrong Campus.

Evelyn Marie Silvia was an American mathematician specializing in functional analysis and particularly in starlike functions. She was a professor at the University of California, Davis, and as well as teaching mathematics at the undergraduate and graduate levels there, was active in the improvement of secondary-school mathematics education.

Aparna W. Higgins is a mathematician known for her encouragement of undergraduate mathematicians to participate in mathematical research. Higgins originally specialized in universal algebra, but her more recent research concerns graph theory, including graph pebbling and line graphs. She is a professor of mathematics at the University of Dayton.

Caren Lea Diefenderfer was an American mathematician known for her efforts to promote numeracy.

Suzanne Ingrid Dorée is a professor of mathematics at Augsburg University, where she is also chair of the Department of Mathematics, Statistics, and Computer Science,. She is chair of the Congress of the Mathematical Association of America and, as such, serves on its board of directors and the Section Visitors Program. Her doctoral research concerned group theory; she has also published in mathematics education.

Janet Heine Barnett is a professor of mathematics at Colorado State University–Pueblo, interested in set theory, mathematical logic, the history of mathematics, women in mathematics, and mathematics education.

Cynthia Jean Wyels is an American mathematician whose interests include linear algebra, combinatorics, and mathematics education, and who is known for her research in graph pebbling and radio coloring of graphs. She is a professor of mathematics at California State University Channel Islands (CSUCI) in Camarillo, California, where she also co-directs the Alliance for Minority Participation.

Karen Rhea is an American mathematics educator, a Collegiate Lecturer Emerita in the mathematics department of the University of Michigan. Before joining the University of Michigan faculty, she was on the faculty at the University of Southern Mississippi.

Pamela Estephania Harris is a Mexican-American mathematician, educator and advocate for immigrants. She is currently an associate professor at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, was formerly an associate professor at Williams College in Williamstown, Massachusetts and is co-founder of the online platform Lathisms. She is also an editor of the e-mentoring blog of the American Mathematical Society (AMS).

Judith Lynnette Covington is an American mathematician and mathematics educator who works as a professor of mathematics at Louisiana State University Shreveport (LSUS).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mark Tomforde</span> American mathematician

Mark Tomforde is an American mathematician and Professor of Mathematics at University of Colorado Colorado Springs. He works in the areas of functional analysis and algebra, and he earned his Ph.D. in mathematics at Dartmouth College in 2002. Tomforde's research interests are in operator algebras and C*-algebras, and he has made contributions to the study of graph C*-algebras and Leavitt path algebras. He was an invited speaker at the 2015 Abel Symposium, and he is a founding member of the Algebras and Rings in Colorado Springs (ARCS) center. He has also received several awards for his teaching and outreach efforts.

Elaine Ann Kasimatis was an American mathematician specializing in discrete geometry and mathematics education. She was a professor in the Department of Mathematics & Statistics at California State University, Sacramento.

Lisa Mantini is an American mathematician.

References

  1. Faculty and staff, Texas Christian University Department of Mathematics
  2. 1 2 3 4 Deborah and Franklin Tepper Haimo Awards for Distinguished College or University Teaching of Mathematics, 1998, Mathematical Association of America, 1998, archived from the original on 1998-02-14
  3. Rhonda Hatcher at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  4. Isabella, Sean (May 8, 2018), "Big 12 continues to push against academic transfer exception", CNHI News, CNHI
  5. Winteridge, Bud (July 2002), "Review of Mathematics Beyond the Numbers", The Mathematical Gazette, 86 (506): 369–370, doi:10.2307/3621911, JSTOR   3621911, S2CID   118676491
  6. "MAA Prizes Presented in Baltimore" (PDF), Notices of the American Mathematical Society , 45 (5): 615, May 1998