UTSC Mathematics Professor Wins Coxeter-James Award

Professor Bálint Virág of the Department of Computer and Mathematical Sciences (UTSC) and the Graduate Departments of Mathematics and Statistics on the St. George campus has been awarded this year’s Coxeter-James prize in Mathematics.

From their website: The Coxeter-James Prize was inaugurated to recognize young mathematicians who have made outstanding contributions to mathematical research. The first award was presented in 1978.

Since it’s inception in 1978 eight other winners of the prize have been affiliated with the University of Toronto.

Congratulations to Professor Virag!

More on the story can be found here

Delury Award Winners Announced

The Delury Award is given annually to recognize excellence in the department’s teaching assistants.   It is usually given to a senior TA (but not always) and is used to recognize the best TAs in the department.

Nominations for the award can come from any faculty member and members of the committee choose winners based on the following criteria:

  • excellence as a TA over their time as a TA here (including those that have shown great improvements over their career)
  • the breadth of their service (including the range of course they have TA’d for from introductory to 4th year and even graduate level course involvement)
  • TA evaluations (if available)
This year’s winners are:
  • Omar Antolin Camarena
  • Yuri Burda
  • Brendan Pass

Congratulations to the winners!

Putnam Competition Results Are In

The Department would like to congratulate this year’s Putnam competition team.  Once again the Mathematics Department at the University of Toronto has placed in the top ten.  We share this honour with MIT, Harvard, CalTech, Stanford, Princeton, Duke, Maryland, Virginia and Waterloo (click here for full results)

This year’s team:

  • Victoria Krakovna (senior) — This is the fourth time she has participated in the competition and last year she won the Elisabeth Putnam prize for best result by a female student.
  • Alexander Remorov (sophomore) — This is the second time he has participated.
  • Konstantin Matveev (junior) — This is his third participation in the competition where he made the top 20 last year and the year before that.

From the official Putnam website: The competition began in 1938 and is designed to stimulate a healthful rivalry in mathematical studies in the colleges and universities of the United States and Canada.  The William Lowell Putnam Mathematical Competition is an annual contest for college students established in 1938 in memory of its namesake.  The Elizabeth Lowell Putnam Prize was established in 1992 to be “awarded periodically to a woman whose performance on the Competition has been deemed particularly meritorious”. Over the years many of the winners of the Putnam competition have become distinguished mathematicians. A number of them have received the Fields Medal and several have won the Nobel Prize in Physics.

When asked for advice for future students looking to write the competition participant Victoria Krakovna had the following to say: “I am in fourth year, so I’ve participated in the Putnam four times. I practiced a lot by doing old Putnam problems both at the Putnam sessions and on my own. The competition has two parts, each part is 3 hours with 6 problems, arranged approximately in order of difficulty. I usually try to solve the first 3-4 problems in each half of the contest, and don’t attempt the last two much. In general it’s better to concentrate on a few problems and make good progress, rather than make small progress on all six. It’s a good idea to look at all the problems, though, for example you might be able to solve #3 without solving #2. The best advice I can offer is to do a lot of practice of old Putnam problems, as much as you can.”

The department is proud of it’s team’s achievements in this years competition!

Undergraduate Mathematics Contest Winners

The department would like to send out congratulations to the winners of this year’s Undergraduate Mathematics Contest.

The contest, started by Professor Edward Barbeau in the spring of 2001, provides an opportunity for undergraduate students to compete in mathematics and practice their competition skills.  The contest is open to all undergraduate students. This year there were 31 participants.

This year’s winners are:

  • 1st place: Alexander Remorov
  • 2nd place: Sida Wang
  • 3rd place: Keith Ng
  • 4th place: Victoria Krakovna
  • 5th place: Sergei Sagatov

Congratulations to all participants!

If you are interested in writing the competition or would like to view previous year’s winners please visit the official Undergraduate Mathematics Contest page.

Outstanding Administrative Staff Honoured

Each year the Faculty of Arts and Science, through the Dean’s office, honours administrative staff for their extraordinary contributions to the Faculty.  This year the Mathematics Department is proud to honour two of it’s own.

Ms. Beverley Leslie, Department Manager, was awarded with the Dean’s Distinguished Service award.  This award is presented to a non-academic staff member who has, over the course of their years of service to the Faculty of Arts and Science, distinguished themselves in ways that are beyond the expectations of administrative peers, academic colleagues and students.

In addition, Ms. Ida Bulat, Graduate Administrator, is the recipient of the Dean’s Student Life Award.  This award recognizes an administrative staff member who has improved the quality of the student experience in the Faculty of Arts and Science. This award recognizes innovations and demonstrated improvements to the services provided to students.

Support for both these awards was strong from both faculty and students in the department.  It is a well deserved honour for them both, please join us in wishing them congratulations!

3 Sloans! A New Record!

We are delighted to announce the Department of Mathematics is the recipient of three (3) Sloan Fellowship Research Awards.

The winners are Larry GuthSpyros Alexakis and Balazs Szegedy

“The Sloan Research Fellowships seek to stimulate fundamental research by early-career scientists and scholars of outstanding promise. These two-year fellowships are awarded yearly to 118 researchers in recognition of distinguished performance and a unique potential to make substantial contributions to their field.” - http://www.sloan.org/fellowships

“With three Sloan recipients, the Department of Mathematics has set a new U of T record for the number of fellowships going to a single department. Of 19 Sloans awarded to mathematicians this year, three went to U of T, two went to SUNY, Stony Brook and 14 other universities got one each.”

Congratulations to the winners!

Official UofT Article

Faculty Honoured for Excellence in Teaching

The department is proud and honoured to announce that Professor James Colliander is a recipient of one of this year’s Outstanding Teaching Awards given out by the Faculty of Arts and Science.

The criteria for the awards is as follows:

The awards are made on the basis of continuing excellence in undergraduate teaching and other contributions to undergraduate education in the Faculty of Arts and Science (St. George). The following attributes are considered:

  • excellence in communication skills
  • mastery of subject area
  • ability to stimulate critical and analytical thinking in students
  • ability to stimulate enthusiasm in students
  • innovations and creativity in teaching methods, course design, and curriculum development

We are very proud of our distinguished faculty member for receiving this honour.

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