Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The society also publishes a semi-annual journal, the Pi Mu Epsilon Journal, which both presents research papers particularly focusing on student authored papers, as well as a problem section. [ 7 ] The Richard V. Andree Awards are given by the organization to undergraduates whose articles in the Journal have been judged as containing the best ...
Sigma Zeta is a national honor society for the natural sciences, computer science, and mathematics. [1] It was founded in 1925 at the now defunct Shurtleff College. [1] The society has regular chapters are baccalaureate institutions and association chapters at junior colleges. [2]
The school has a chapter of the New York State Science Honor Society. This requires students to have completed four semesters of high school or college science. Candidates must have an 85% science course average and an 80% GPA. They must also have a 75% average in high school or college mathematics courses. Peer tutoring is strongly encouraged ...
Kurt Gödel Society; Mathematical Council of the Americas (MCofA) [1] Mathematical Optimization Society; Mathematical Society of South Eastern Europe (MASSEE) [2] Quaternion Society; Ramanujan Mathematical Society; Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics; Southeast Asian Mathematical Society (SEAMS) [3] Spectra (mathematical association)
Mu Alpha Theta (ΜΑΘ) is an International mathematics honor society for high school and two-year college students. As of June 2015, it served over 108,000 student members in over 2,200 chapters in the United States and 20 foreign countries.
The Regents Examinations are developed and administered by the New York State Education Department (NYSED) under the authority of the Board of Regents of the University of the State of New York. Regents exams are prepared by a conference of selected New York teachers of each test's specific discipline who assemble a test map that highlights the ...
In 1891, Charlotte Scott of Britain became the first woman to join the AMS, then called the New York Mathematical Society. [3] The society reorganized under its present name (American Mathematical Society) and became a national society in 1894, [4] and that year Scott became the first woman on the first Council of the society. [5]
New York State has used various foci of content and methods of teaching math including New Math (1960s), 'back to the basics' (1970s), Whole Math (1990s), Integrated Math, and Everyday Mathematics. How to teach math, what to teach, and its effectiveness has been a topic of debate in New York State and nationally since the "Math Wars" started in ...