LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College [email protected].

34
LEGACY LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College Kenyon College [email protected] [email protected]

Transcript of LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College [email protected].

Page 1: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

LEGACYLEGACY

Carol S. SchumacherCarol S. SchumacherKenyon CollegeKenyon [email protected]@kenyon.edu

Page 2: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

R. L. Moore and Associates

H.S. WallH. J. Ettlinger

R. L. Moore

Page 3: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

R. L. Moore and Associates

CarolSchumacher

John Neuberger

Robert Eslinger

H.S. WallH. J. Ettlinger

Page 4: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

Legacy

something transmitted by or received from an ancestor or predecessor or from the past—Merriam Webster

Page 5: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

The Moore Plan

Moore’s Objective: To train students to do research in pure mathematics.

Moore’s Primary Tactic: Hand-picking his students: finding and developing (creative) mathematical talent and enthusiasm, often where it was not before known to exist

Moore was very tenacious: Once he set his sites on a student, that student’s fate was pretty much sealed.

Page 6: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

Features of Moore’s Method

1. Selection of students capable of coping with the type of material to be studied.

2. Controlling size of group: 4-8 students.3. Injection of the proper amount of

intuitive material, as an aid in the construction of proofs.

4. Insistence, by the students themselves, on rigorous proof and extreme clarity.

5. Encouragement, even promotion, of competition among the students.

R. L. Wilder

From an address:quoted in R. L. Moore, Mathematician and Teacher by John Parker, pgs. 216-217.

Page 7: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

Moore’s Rules and Mores

• Students prove theorems; present their proofs in class

• No textbooks for the course; no outside sources consulted

• No external help; no discussion of problems outside of class

• Students criticize weaknesses or inaccuracies in presented proofs

• There was no attempt to cater to the “average” student. “The pace was set by the most talented.” (R.L. Wilder)

Page 8: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

No books, no lecturesno outside sources, just you . . .

There is a lot of misunderstanding

Page 9: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

“That’s interesting. I just don’t see how it’s teaching.”

---An award-winning Physics Professor from CalTech

Explaining what I do

Page 10: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.
Page 11: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

Modified Moore Methods

“Only one person has ever taught by

The Moore Method and that person is R. L. Moore.”

Page 12: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

Core of the Moore Method

“I think that the substance of [Moore’s] successful teaching was largely his interest in the development of ideas, intellectual ideas, mathematical ideas, on

the part of his students.”

R. D. Anderson

Page 13: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

Basic Assumptions

1. My main job as a teacher is to work towards the goal of making my students independent of me.

Ideally, this means that I must. . . 2. Elevate my students from recipients to

creators of knowledge. 3. Virtually all students can do mathematics, if

given the time they need to wrestle with mathematical ideas.

Page 14: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

Ways and Means

Give students the time to discover, present, and debate mathematics ; let them recognize the power of their minds.

Page 15: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

Us

Our student

s!

10,000 hours

Page 16: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

Ways and Means

Have students responsible for moving the class forward by having them tackle mathematics that is both significant and central.

Page 17: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

Ways and Means

Carefully match problems and material to students; make challenges vary widely in difficulty so that all students can both succeed and be stretched mathematically.

Page 18: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

Features of Moore’s Method

1. Selection of students capable of coping with the type of material to be studied.

2. Controlling size of group: 4-8 students.3. Injection of the proper amount of

intuitive material, as an aid in the construction of proofs.

4. Insistence, by the students themselves, on rigorous proof and extreme clarity.

5. Encouragement, even promotion, of competition among the students.

R. L. Wilder

From an address:quoted in R. L. Moore, Mathematician and Teacher by John Parker, pgs. 216-217.

Page 19: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

Features of Moore’s Method

1. Selection of students capable of coping with the type of material to be studied.

2. Controlling size of group: 4-8 students.3.3. Injection of the proper amount of Injection of the proper amount of

intuitive material, as an aid in the intuitive material, as an aid in the construction of proofs.construction of proofs.

4. Insistence, by the students themselves, on rigorous proof and extreme clarity.

5. Encouragement, even promotion, of competition among the students.

R. L. Wilder

From an address:quoted in R. L. Moore, Mathematician and Teacher by John Parker, pgs. 216-217.

Page 20: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

Features of Moore’s Method

1. Selection of students capable of coping with the type of material to be studied.

2. Controlling size of group: 4-8 students.3.3. Injection of the proper amount of Injection of the proper amount of

intuitive material, as an aid in the intuitive material, as an aid in the construction of proofs.construction of proofs.

4.4. Insistence, by the students themselves, Insistence, by the students themselves, on rigorous proof and extreme clarity.on rigorous proof and extreme clarity.

5.5. Encouragement, even promotion, of Encouragement, even promotion, of competition among the students.competition among the students.

R. L. Wilder

From an address:quoted in R. L. Moore, Mathematician and Teacher by John Parker, pgs. 216-217.

Page 21: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

A Different Shaped Fence

“What Moore did when he had a group of people in class was to go through a kind of group learning exercise with Moore, the teacher, in control. I know that Moore did not believe in cooperative learning. . . but I think many of Moore’s teaching techniques can be done formally using cooperative learning . . . as an alternative [to] the highly competitive [environment that] he generated in class.”

R. D. Anderson

From an interview:quoted in R. L. Moore, Mathematician and Teacher by John Parker, pgs. 216-217.

Page 22: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

Why teach using the Moore Method?Who is it for?

Paul R. Halmos

Page 23: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

Mathematicians!

H. J. Ettlinger H.S. WallR. L. Moore

50 Ph.D. students2750 Descendants

66 Ph.D. students

370 Descendants27 Ph.D. students

398 Descendants

Moore was elected to the National Academy of Sciences, as were three of his students—R.H. Bing, G.T. Whyburn, and R. L. Wilder.

Page 24: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

Service to the Profession

President of AMS1937-1938

R. H. Bing 1977-1978

R.L. Wilder 1955-1956

G.T. Whyburn 1953-1954

Page 25: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

Presidents of the MAA

R.D. Anderson 1981-1982

Lida K. Barrett 1989-1990

R. H. Bing 1963-1964

R.L. Wilder 1965-1966

E.E. Moise 1967-1968

G. S. Young 1969-1970

Page 26: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

And there’s more…

• (Vice President of AMS) x 2• Associate Secretary and then Secretary of the AMS

for 17 years.• Treasurer of the AMS• (Distinguished service award from MAA) x 3• Several editors and associate editors of major

journals of the AMS• Lester R. Ford Award• Chauvenet Prize• Numerous Department chairs, some for many years.

Page 27: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

Legacy

(15th Century)--A body of persons sent on a mission.---Oxford English Dictionary

Page 28: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

Ben Fitzpatrick

Albert Lewis

Harry Lucas

Ron Douglas

John Neuberger

Page 29: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

Ted Mahavier

Lee and Bill Mahavier

Jean Mahavier

Page 30: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

Ted Mahavier

Lee and Bill Mahavier

Jean MahavierJudy Kennedy

Ed Parker

Page 31: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

Bob Eslinger

Mike Starbird Ted Odell

Ed Burger

Page 32: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

Teena Carroll Judy Holdener

Marie Snipes Eric Kahn

Page 33: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.

Gavin Larose

Judith Covington Ron Taylor Jackie Jensen

Stan Yoshinobu

Page 34: LEGACY Carol S. Schumacher Kenyon College SchumacherC@kenyon.edu.