Session 1: June 27 - July 9, 2010
Session 2: July 11 - July 23, 2010

 
   
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MMSS Faculty for 2010

We are proud to introduce the outstanding faculty participating in the Michigan Math and Science Scholars Summer Program 2010. These members of the University of Michigan faculty have experience teaching high school students and several faculty have received the LS&A Excellence in Education Award. Download their bio's (WORD, PDF).

 

Frederick Becchettibecceti
Fred is a Professor in the Department of Physics. He received his B.Sc., M.S. and Ph.D. at the University of Minnesota. His research focuses on nuclear reactions, nuclear astrophysics and medical physics. Fred is a recipient of the LS&A Excellence in Teaching Award and has recently served on the American Association of Physics Teachers-Undergraduate Teaching Committee. He often can be found judging science fairs, including the Southeast Michigan Science Fair and the International Science Fair. His hobbies include fishing, skiing and, of course, magic.

Mort Brown brown
Mort is an Emeritus Professor of Mathematics at the University of Michigan. He received his Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of Wisconsin. His fields of research are topology and dynamical systems. His most recent obsession is developing interesting mathematical games as a means of introducing students to some of the underlying concepts that flow across all advanced math.

 

Bryden Cais
Bryden Cais is a postdoctoral fellow at the Centre de recherches mathematiques in caisMontreal. He received his B.A. from Harvard and his Ph.D. from the University of Michigan. He is interested in the application of geometry and algebra to problems in number theory.

Bryden's love of math began with a high school summer math program much like MMSS, and he is very excited to be working with MMSS this summer! Outside of math, Bryden enjoys cycling, dancing, rock-climbing, and tinkering around with anything mechanical.

William (Beau) Carson
Beau is an NIH Postdoctoral Research Fellow with appointments in the Department of Pathology in the University of Michigan Medical School, and the Department of Immunology in the University of Michigan Rackham School of Graduate Studies.  He received a B.S. in Molecular and Cell Biology and a B.A. in Philosophy at the carsonUniversity of Connecticut, and a Ph. D. in Immunology from the University of Connecticut Health Center. His research focuses on the cellular components of the immune system, with a focus on the developmental biology of immune cells and epigenetic regulation of immune cell function.  His present research involves studying the effects of severe inflammation and polymicrobial sepsis on mediating immunosuppression in both animal models and human patients. Past work includes studies in allergic asthma, viral infections, granulomatous lung inflammation, and complementary and alternative medicines. He also has extensive experience in education and mentoring of high school, undergraduate and graduate students in classroom and laboratory settings.

Zhan Chen
Zhan is a Professor in the Department of Chemistry of the University of Michigan. He received his PhD from the University of California at Berkeley, and did his postdoctoral research at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. The research in his group at the University of Michigan is focused on the molecular level characterizations of complicated surfaces and interfaces, such as polymer surfaces, polymer interfaces, and interfacial proteins using advanced analytical techniques. Such research provides in-depth understanding of molecular mechanisms of biocompatibility, biofouling, and polymer adhesion.  Zhan received his National Science Foundation Career Award in 2004, and his Beckman Young Investigator Award in 2003. He was named as a Dow Corning Assistant/Associate Professor between 2003 and 2006. In his spare time, he enjoys reading, hiking, and traveling.

Mark Congerconger
Mark is a Lecturer and program developer in the Mathematics Department. He received his B.A. degree from Williams College and M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Michigan. In between his B.A. and Ph.D. he spent many years working as a professional computer programmer, and did lots of programming for fun as well. His research interests are in enumerative combinatorics and probability, but he considers himself a mathematical generalist. His recent work has focused on the mathematics of card shuffling and dealing. For fun he does woodworking and computer hacking.

William Currie
Bill is an Associate Professor in the School of Natural Resources & Environment at the University of Michigan. He holds a BS in Physics from Brown University, a MS in Environmental Sciences from the University of Virginia, and a Ph.D. in Natural Resources from the University of New Hampshire. Previously, Bill was a postdoctoral scholar at the Ecosystems Center at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, MA. His research and teaching at UM focus on the development and application of dynamic simulation models of ecosystems, specifically on how ecosystem organization translates into controls on system responses to aspects of global change. His research is collaborative, typically applying ecosystem models to interpret the results of large-scale field manipulations with other investigators. Current research, for example, includes a National Science Foundation funded project to understand carbon and nitrogen interactions that control enhanced production in loblolly pine forests in which entire stands of trees are being artificially exposed to doubled levels of atmospheric CO2. Learn more about his research and teaching at his website.

Glenn Foxfox
Glenn is a Professor of Biology at Jackson Community College. He received his B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. in Biology from the University of Michigan, where he taught as a Graduate Student Instructor for four years. Glenn’s research focuses on the evolution and ecology of squamate reptiles (specifically snake evolution and origins), and he has a special interest in the philosophy of science and the combination of technologically intensive and philosophically cogent approaches to testing hypotheses of historical relationships among organisms. In his spare time, he enjoys hiking, nature photography, travel, and developing means to acquire more spare time.

Mel Hochster
Mel Hochster is the Chair of the Department of Mathematics here at the University of Michigan, a Jack E. McLaughlin Distinguished University Professor of Mathematics, meland is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and of the Michigan STRIDE Committee that is dealing with gender equity issues in the sciences. He did his undergraduate work at Harvard and received his Ph.D. from Princeton. His research interests might be described as studying solutions of a large number of equations in a large number of unknowns, including their geometry, by techniques related to number theory. He has five children, including one who is grown and is a mathematician, a college sophomore and thirteen-year old triplets. Somehow this does not leave a lot of time for recreation, but his hobbies include bridge and cryptic crossword puzzles.

Philip Hugheshughes
Philip is a Research Scientist and Adjunct Professor in the Astronomy Department of the University of Michigan. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Sussex in the United Kingdom and did postdoctoral research at the Mullard Radio Astronomy Observatory of the Cavendish Laboratory, Cambridge, before coming to the University of Michigan in 1983. His research focuses on energetic flows in the form of plasma jets, traveling at almost the speed of light, from the environment of the supermassive black holes that inhabit the nuclei of active galaxies. These studies use simulations run on clusters of computers, modeling the plasma flow in a way similar to that used by aerospace engineers to model to air flow over a plane's wing. He enjoys photography and movies, and is obsessive about keeping up with international news and current affairs.

Trachette Jackson jackson
Trace is a Professor in the Department of Mathematics. She has a B.S. in Mathematics from Arizona State University and a Ph.D. in Applied Mathematics from the University of Washington. Trace's research interests involve developing models of tumor structure, growth, and chemotherapeutic control strategies. In addition to mentoring students on career opportunities in math and science, Trace likes hiking, gardening and cooking.

Santhadevi Jeyabalansantha
Santha is a Lecturer in the Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology (MCDB). She received her M.S. and Ph.D. from the University of Michigan in Genetics and Developmental Biology. She also holds a M.S. in Microbiology from Eastern Michigan University and a M.Sc., in Parasitology from Madras University, India. She is devoted to full time teaching, coordinating the Genetics Lab and the Developmental Biology Lab for upper level undergraduates and teaching a Genetics course in Spring terms. She is a recipient of LS&A Excellence in Education award in 1992, 94 and 98. Her "cyber fly" project won a Computer World Smithsonian award in 1999. She is also an academic advisor in LS&A Honors and received the Ruth M. Sinclair Memorial award for advising in 1997. Santha enjoys teaching, cooking, reading Tamil literature and spending time with her three adult daughters.

Mike Jones
Michael A. Jones earned his B.S. degree from Santa Clara University and M.A. and jonesPh.D. in Mathematics from Northwestern University.  After a 3-year position at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point and a 1-year visiting position at Loyola University in Chicago, he taught for 10 years at Montclair State University in New Jersey. In August 2008, he became an Associate Editor for Mathematical Reviews, a division of the American Mathematical Society. His research interests include the development and application of mathematics to analyze the social sciences, including economics, political science, psychology, and law. He is currently writing a book about mathematics and sports. This will be his second summer teaching in the MMSS program.

Nkem Khumbahnkem
Nkem is a Lecturer with the Comprehensive Studies Program at the University of Michigan. He holds a BS in Mathematics from the University of the District of Columbia, a MS in mathematics from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, and a Ph.D. in Information Technology from George Mason University. Prior to joining the faculty at the University of Michigan, Nkem was an Assistant Professor of Mathematics at North Georgia College and State University. He also held research fellowships at Institute for Pure and Applied Mathematics (UCLA) and the Mathematical Science Research Institute (UC Berkeley).

At the University of Michigan, he has three main professional interests: 1) teaching mathematics 2) working with high schools to deliver mathematics instruction that is aligned with college expectations, and 3) research on development and application of mathematical structures that facilitate the compression of massive data sets with minimal loss to the statistical structure of the data.  In addition to his interests in mathematics, science, society and international development, Nkem enjoys playing soccer and board games with his three boys.

David C. Michener
David Michener is the Assistant Curator at the UM Nichols Arboretum and Matthaei Botanical Gardens and an Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Program in the Environment and the School of Natural Resource & Environment. His undergraduate degree is in botany from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and his Mmichner.A. and Ph.D. degrees in botany are from the Claremont Graduate School in conjunction with work performed at the Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden. He spent six years on a NSF-funded postdoc at the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University: he's been at the University of Michigan since then. David's professional career includes responsibility for the exotic to endemic living plant collections and related landscapes managed by the "Arb and Gardens" in and near Ann Arbor, although his work has taken him from Brazil to the Russian Far East. David is nationally active in professional societies and with granting agencies in the management of living collections as museum-like entities. His teaching and curatorial responsibilities include facilitating and engaging investigators with the research resources; a recent twist is being the junior author on a pharmaceutical article (David figured the phylogenetic depth to the argument); his own work is increasingly focused on digital mapping, records, and virtual access. David's outside interests include gardening, fishing with friends, and travel.

Kristen Moore
Kristen is an Associate Professor in the Department of Mathematics.  She earned hermoore B.S. in Mathematics from Bucknell University and her M.S. and Ph.D. in Mathematics from the University of Connecticut.  Kristen received the Class of 1923 Memorial Teaching Award and an Excellence in Education Award from the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts.  In her research, Kristen studies mathematical problems that arise in finance and insurance, including strategies to help people avoid poverty in retirement.  Kristen enjoys movies, reading, and exercising, but her favorite activity is spending time with husband, 3-year-old son, and 1-year-old daughter. 

Patrick Nelson
Patrick is a Research Assistant in the Center for Computation Medicine and Bioinformatics.  He earned his B.S. from Arizona State University, a M.S. and Ph.D. from the University of Washington - all in Applied Mathematics. Patrick's research areas are in non-linear dynamics, mathematical modeling, and mathematical biology including virology and parasitic infections. His hobbies include baseball, tennis, squash, fishing, hiking and climbing.

Georg Raithel raithel
Georg is a Professor in the Department of Physics. Georg received his Ph.D. at the University of Munich. In his research, he employs laser-cooled rubidium atoms to study matter waves in optical lattices and in other atom trapping devices, and to investigate collision processes involving cold, very highly excited atoms (Rydberg atoms) and cold plasmas. In his spare time and vacations, Georg enjoys bicycling, skiing, camping and mountain hiking with his family.

 

Edward Rothmanrothman
Ed is a Professor in the Department of Statistics and Director of the Center for Statistical Consultation and Research. He holds a B.Sc. degree in Mathematics from McGill University in Montreal, Canada, and a Ph.D. degree in Statistics from the Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore Maryland. Ed is a consultant with researchers throughout the University, a variety of corporations, and students. He assists people with the design of their study, the analysis, and the presentation of the results. He has been honored for his teaching of undergraduates.

Sheila Schuellersheila
Sheila is an adjunct lecturer at Eastern Michigan University and an independent consultant for natural resource management and conservation organizations across the country. She received her B.A. from Swarthmore College and her M.S. and Ph.D. from the University of Michigan, where she has also served as assistant director of the Ecosystem Management Initiative in the School of Natural Resources and Environment, a lecturer in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, and an adjunct instructional consultant for the Center for Research on Learning and Teaching. Sheila has conducted research in Michigan, the California Channel Islands, and Greece, and her publications range from research articles on the evolution of hummingbird-pollinated plants, to practical guidebooks for natural resource managers, to an animal behavior textbook for middle and high school students. She enjoys learning and teaching all aspects of ecology, especially outdoors, and most of all while picnicking in a prairie with her daughter.

Monica Valluri
Dr. Valluri was an undergraduate at Birla Institute of Technology and Science Pilani, Rajasthan, India and got her doctorate from the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore. She came to Michigan from the University of Chicago, and is Research Scientist in the Department of Astronomy.  Her research covers a variety of areas in Astronomy but is based on Galactic Dynamics. Some of the topics she works on address issues relating to supermassive black holes in galaxies and their role in the evolution of galaxies; the properties of the mysterious "Dark Matter" that constitutes most of the mass in the Universe and how we might be able to understand the properties of this matter using computer experiments; and how dynamical processes affect the evolution of galaxies in clusters.

David Winn
Dave is a Lecturer in the Department of Physics. He earned his Ph.D. in Physics from the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor for research into the properties of top quark decays. Dave is a passionate fan of the game of hockey and spends most of his free waking moments pursuing the sport. When Dave is not teaching or skating he can be found testing his knowledge of "applied physics" by riding one of the many beautiful (and challenging!) mountain bike trails in Southeast Michigan.

 

Michigan Math and Science Scholars
University of Michigan
2082 East Hall
530 Church Street
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1043

Voice 734.647.4466
Fax 734.763.0937
mmss@umich.edu

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