Welcome to Somerville Mathematics

Welcome to Somerville Mathematics, a blog devoted to exciting mathematical things happening in Somerville MA. I am the founder of The Somerville Mathematics Fund, www.Somervillemathematicsfund.org
The Math Fund was chartered to celebrate and encourage mathematics achievement in Somerville. I hope you will check out my TEDxSomerville talk on the Somerville Math Fund,
I find that there are many other interesting things happening mathematically in Somerville and I hope on this blog to have others share what they are doing. So please contact me at mathfund@gmail.com if you would like to contribute an article.
Erica
Showing posts with label Somerville Math Fund Scholarships. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Somerville Math Fund Scholarships. Show all posts

Friday, June 9, 2023


Pictured above are Sanford Bogage (SMF VP), Ariyeh Weissman-Bennett, David Ou, Jonathan Chan, Veid Patel, Hashem El-Saudi, Erica Voolich (SMF Pres.), Wendy Guo, Nyemma DeAndrade, Lia Sokol, Nicole López Ordóñez, Ashish Budha, Andrew Bonney.  Not pictured Fenya Savage Mantell.


By Erica Dakin Voolich

The Somerville Mathematics Fund is pleased to announce the winners of their renewable mathematics scholarships for 2023.  The Math Fund was founded to celebrate and encourage math achievement and these students deserve to be celebrated for their work in math and science while in high school. Thanks to the generosity of many individuals and a few organizations, this year we were able to award a record 12 scholarships, totaling $72,000 over four years.

Due to a COVID-19 outbreak, we were unable to personally award the scholarships at the awards night for four years.  It felt so wonderful to be back personally handing out the scholarships and meeting the winners in person again like we used to do.  It is also wonderful to see so many first generation college students in our group this year, a total of eight!

We definitely want to celebrate our scholarship winners for their achievements while meeting the challenges of going to high school, much of it was during a pandemic. CONGRATULATIONS.  

The winners are attending a variety of schools next fall.  Andrew Bonney and Jonathan Chan will be attending UMass Boston; Ashish Budha, Northeastern U; Nyemma DeAndrade and Wendy Guo, Bryn Mawr College; Hashem El-Saudi and Fenya Savage Mantell, Tufts U; Nicole López Ordóñez and David Ou, Boston U; Veid Patel, MIT; Lia Sokol, U of Maryland; and Ariyeh Weissmann-Bennett, UMass Amherst.

A bit of explanation about the scholarship names.  Some scholarships are supported by many donations, some large, some small — but together there is $6000 for each student.  For those students who participated in Scrapheap Showdown this year, we had some of our sponsors who each sponsored one year of a scholarship.  We have some named annual scholarships, two memorial scholarships are for founders of the Somerville Math Fund.  Two of our named scholarships are given by one of our first scholarship winners back in 2001 in the name of his favorite famous mathematician.  One is given in memory of a mother who distinguished herself in WW2 as a nurse and saved for her children’s education. And, finally, one is given in honor of a distinguished Tufts Math professor and Somerville Math Fund Board member who retired from each this year.

Their annual scholarships of $1500 are renewable for up to a total of four years as long as they maintain a B average and take mathematics or courses which use mathematics.  

The five memorial scholarships this year are for  Dr. Alice T  Schafer, Lt. Catherine M. Landers, S. Ramanujan, and Michael Voolich.  The honor scholarship is for Dr. Zbigniew Nitecki



One of the scholarships was given in the memory of an outstanding woman mathematician, Dr. Alice T. Schafer.  Nicole López Ordóñez  was awarded the Alice T. Schafer Memorial Scholarship. Nicole was busy with the Calculus Project, Math Club, Robotics team, Fablab, and Science League while in high school.  She loved the STEM problem solving challenges as she branched out to try new activities.

Nicole is planning on majoring in Biomedical Engineering at Boston University.

Dr. Schafer (1915 - 2009) was orphaned as an infant and raised by two aunts.  When she went to college at the University of Richmond of Virginia, women students weren’t allowed in the library and she was discouraged from majoring in mathematics.  She won prizes, earned a PhD, taught at colleges (including Wellesley) and among the things she is known for is helping start the Association for Women in Mathematics (1971).  

Less known about Dr. Schafer was her role helping to start the Somerville Mathematics Fund in 2000 -- attending all of the planning meetings and contributing to their work as long as she was able.  She is remembered for her passion and work to insure mathematical opportunities for women. Nicole loved teaching what she learned in math initially at home and then to others.  Then she discovered that math was more than just an answer to a do-now problem but an innovative way to solve problems as an engineer would.  It opened a whole new world to her.

Since Dr. Schafer was committed to the education and supporting women in mathematics, Nicole’s majoring in biomedical engineering is a wonderful way to honor Dr. Alice Schafer's memory of encouraging women in the maths and sciences.


The Lt. Catherine M. Landers Memorial Scholarship was awarded to Wendy Guo.  Wendy has an interest in becoming a neurologist.  Her interest in health care is part of her larger interest in human rights, social justice, and healthcare for minorities.

When Lt. Landers (1920 - 2012) wanted to go to nursing school (graduating in 1942), her grandmother opened a cedar chest were she had been saving one dollar bills one at a time to help pay for her granddaughter’s education.  Lt Landers won a Bronze Star for her service during WW2, where she ran a field hospital outside Paris; she was about to be shipped to the far East when WW2 ended and so she boarded a transport ship for the USA instead.   Jay Landers and Jasper Lawson donated a scholarship in her memory, honoring her commitment to education.

Wendy Guo’s interest is in neurology and the theoretical analysis and abstractions of the brain. A Neuroscience major at Bryn Mawr College is a wonderful way to honor Lt. Landers' commitment to education.


Our two scholarships in the memory of S. Ramanujan, are a gift from the Jha Family and were awarded to Hashem El-Saudi who is planning on attending Tufts University and Veid Patel who is planning on attending MIT.  Each has been a member of the Somerville High School Math Club, that has organized math meets and group problem solving of puzzles and activities for middle school students and participated in math contests.  

Hashem followed the example of his sister years ago joining the math club and was the president of the Math Club this year. He was involved in redesigning the format for the math meets. He spent two summers interning in a brain tumor cancer research Lab at Dana-Farber/Harvard Center. He wants to be a pediatric psychologist.  He is planning on majoring in neurology at Tufts.

Veid is interested in and fascinated how the universe works — how the math constants and formulas can explain the real world in a way that language failed to.  Veid wants to be an astrophysicist and is planning on majoring in physics at MIT. He spent time last summer at the Momentum AI program at MIT and the summer before at Lesley’s AI, Art and Robotics program. 

Srinivasa Ramanujan (1887 - 1920) was a mostly self-taught brilliant Indian mathematician who sadly died young.  He discovered his love of mathematics while in high school when he found a book that listed 4000 mathematical theorems without information on they were discovered or developed. So he continued his math work, often on a slate, only recording his concluding theorem on paper when finished, without the details of how he came to the conclusion.  With his humble beginnings and no formal mathematical training, the story of his life and how he finally connected with the well-known mathematicians of his day is detailed the book and movie, The Man Who Knew Infinity. That book inspired the Jha family who gave this scholarship in his honor. Ramanujan’s notebooks and papers have included both previously discovered and new mathematical theorems many in number theory.  These notebooks have continued to provide mathematicians with material to study and try to figure out how Ramanujan discovered these theorems and to see if they were provable.  

The sponsor of this scholarship was inspired by S. Ramanujan as a high school student more than twenty years ago. Hashem’s and Veid’s interesting in how their love of math can help explain the world of neurology and physics is a way to honor S. Ramanujan’s memory.  S. Ramanujan was self taught before he finally connected with the mathematicians in England and worked at the University of Cambridge with the leading mathematicians of  the day.  



The Michael Voolich Memorial Scholarship was awarded to Nyemma DeAndrade who is interested majoring in biochemistry and molecular biology at Bryn Mawr College.  

Michael Voolich (1943 - 2019) was a person who was interested in how everything worked, if Renaissance man was a job offering, Michael would have applied. He learned by asking questions and then he loved telling everyone what he had learned and how seemingly disparate things were related.  He had a career than included teaching many different subjects in local schools, none of which was math. But, he married a math teacher.  So, when the Somerville Math Fund was being discussed and organized in his living room, of course he joined the founding board.  

He liked to do things for people and of course for the math fund.  His telephone calls and trips to Table Talk Pie Company each year for city-wide Pi Night celebration were a highlight each year. He especially loved helping find things for others to donate for the Scrapheap Showdown each year and his marvelous multiple clamps will still be a necessary part of future Scrapheap challenges to come.  

Michael loved to be able to give and help others in the local community along with his extended family here and abroad. This scholarship was funded by the many people who donated in his memory to the Somerville Math Fund.  

During Nyemma’s junior year she took a dual enrollment class between Somerville High School and Cambridge College — it was all hands on and inspired her to major in science and engineering.  Michael would have loved this class, he taught various industrial arts classes over the years and would be thrilled Nyemma had the experience and would want her to tell him all about it. 


The Scholarship in honor of  Dr. Zbigniew Nitecki was awarded to Andrew Bonney who is interested majoring in computer Science at UMass Boston.  The ability to create something out of basically nothing,  hooked him on computer science in his AP computer science class, and led him to participate in a cyber security hackathon challenge finding and correcting vulnerabilities in websites.

Dr Nitecki recently retired from Tufts University after 50 years of service teaching math, he is now Emeritus.  He also served on the Somerville Math Fund board for fourteen years from 2008 to 2022, also retiring from the Board last fall.

Dr. Nitecki is a mathematician working in nonlinear dynamics and chaos theory. He has been on the faculty at Tufts University since 1972; previously he taught at Yale and the City College of New York. Besides papers in research journals, he has written four books: Differentiable Dynamics (MIT Press, 1971: Russian translation 1975, Chinese 1979), First Course in Differential Equations co-authored with Marty Guterman (Saunders, 1984, 1988, 1992), was used by many departments (including Tufts) as the text for the last math course most engineers take. Calculus Deconstructed, A Second Course in First Year Calculus (MAA, 2009), and Calculus in 3D: Geometry, Vectors, and Multivariate Calculus (MAA, 2018).  In 1982-3, he served as the first director of the Geometric Analysis program at the National Science Foundation. He has served on the editorial board of two journals: Real Analysis Exchange and Qualitative Theory of Dynamical Systems. He has served as Associate Treasurer of the American Mathematical Society since February 2012. 

Andrew’s interest in completing all the math and computer science classes in a dual enrollment at Bunker Hill Community College while still at Somerville High School makes him a good match to Dr Niteck’s many calculus books.


For years, we have held a high school engineering challenge in October that is both a hands-on problem solving event for the participants but also a fundraiser for scholarships.

The Scrapheap Showdown last October had three gold sponsors who each sponsored one year of a Somerville Math Fund Scholarship.  The other three years of these scholarships were made possible by many generous donors contributing to the Somerville Math Fund.  

Three of the donors who each paid for one year of three different student scholarship were Julie Schneider, the Bickoff Family, and Winter Hill Bank.  The Somerville Math Fund Scholarship, generously sponsored by three sponsors of Scrapheap Showdown were awarded to Ashish Budha, Jonathan Chan, and David Ou.



The scholarship whose first  year was sponsored by Julie Schneider was awarded to Ashish Budha.  Ashish plans to study computer science at Northeastern University.  When he was in 10th grade he first heard someone talk of coding as something to create games, apps, and software.  YouTube and Google explained what coding was and he was hooked on the problem solving challenges of programming as started with his first class in 11th grade.  Ashish is interested in how groundbreaking technology can further human life experience.



The scholarship whose first year was sponsored by the Bickoff family of the Commercial Cleaning Company was awarded to Jonathan Chan.

Jonathan plans to study finance at UMass Boston.  While taking a business class, he was captivated by the idea that he could manage his own finances, and then realized the world is run by money and it is more than just earning and spending.  Having a healthy relationship to money is important, so going into finance seemed to be the thing for Jonathan to do.


The scholarship whose first year was sponsored by Winter Hill Bank was awarded to David Ou.

David plans to study computer science at Boston University.  David was a math tutor and peer mentor for the Calculus Project and spent last summer at MIT studying artificial intelligence (AI) and building a reCaptcha solver AI from scratch. He is interested in how computer science can be applied to autonomous cars and robotics.  He has a concern with accompanying ethical issues with biased machine training, data security and deep fakes. David is interesting in studying computer science, specifically AI and the accompanying issues related to it.


The Somerville Mathematics Fund receives donations from many people — many small, medium and larger donations that together make a difference.  If you sent $5, $50, or $500, for example, you contributed to fund to be even more scholarships to be awarded.  When we have $6,000 donated, we can give another scholarship.  And last in our list, but definitely not least in any way, are three more scholarships that were made up of gifts from many donors.  If you donated, thank you.  Pat yourself on the back.

From the generosity of many comes each of these three whole scholarships which were awarded to Fenya Savage Mantell, Lia Sokol, and Ariyeh Weissman-Bennett.



A Somerville Mathematics Fund Scholarship was awarded to Fenya Savage Mantell.

Fenya plans to study data science at Tufts University.  In high school Fenya advocated for the Green New Deal and climate education in schools and was pushing for accessibility and equity in access to technology and climate friendly initiatives. She is interested in the relationship between computer science, ethics, policy and philosophy — the ethics in programming applications and the implications of AI and technology. 



A Somerville Mathematics Fund Scholarship was awarded to Lia Sokol.

Lia plans on studying psychology at U of Maryland.  She joined the robotics team while still busy with many other volunteer activities. Lia has been involved for many years volunteering with children — from playing with pre-school children in a domestic violence shelter, helping with Argenziano’s after school program, and at a summer camp for low-income and special needs kids during a COVID summer. So, it is not a surprise that she sees herself involved with education in a STEM field or counseling in the future.


A Somerville Mathematics Fund Scholarship was awarded to Ariyeh Weissman-Bennett

Ariyeh plans on studying at the College of Natural Sciences at UMass Amherst.  Ariyeh is interested in so many things that he wants to explore in college, that he isn’t ready to narrow his studies to a major yet. Stay tuned for updates from him when we ask for “news from scholarship winners” in the Somerville Math Fund annual newsletter, Imagination!


The Somerville Mathematics Fund was chartered in 2000 to celebrate and encourage achievement in mathematics in the city of Somerville, Massachusetts. It May 2011, it was recognized as the outstanding Dollars for Scholars Chapter in New England.  Since its founding in 2000, it has awarded $631,000 in four-year mathematics scholarships to one hundred thirty outstanding Somerville students.  


©2023, Erica Dakin Voolich

This link to this blog post is hhttps://somervillemathematics.blogspot.com/2023/06/pictured-above-are-sanford-bogage-smf.html




Friday, June 18, 2021

Outstanding Students win Somerville Math Fund Scholarships

The Somerville Mathematics Fund is pleased to announce the winners of their renewable mathematics scholarships for 2021.  The Math Fund was founded to celebrate and encourage math achievement and these students deserve to be celebrated for their work in math and science while in high school. Thanks to the generosity of many individuals and a few organizations, this year we were able to award a record 10 scholarships, totaling $60,000 over four years.

            Somerville Math Fund Scholarship Winners:
Top (left to right): Samiyra Afife, Henry Ayanna, Owen Chiu, AJ Feldman, 
Brayden Goldstein-Gelb; 
Bottom (left to right) Nasreen Kaur, Alexandra Marston, Justin Millette, Sophia Sim, and Kevin Wen

Due to COVID-19, we were unable to award the scholarships at an awards night for a second year.  The school notified the students they had won without telling them which scholarship, so they didn’t know the President of the Somerville Math Fund or the donor of their scholarship would be calling each of them to tell them of their award and that a letter was in the mail.

The winners are attending a variety of schools next fall.  Samiyra Afife and Brandon Goldstein-Gelb will attend Brown U; Henry Ayanna, Harvard U; Owen Chiu, Northeastern U; A J Feldman, Colby College; Nasreen Kaur, Boston U; Alexandra Marston, UMass Boston; Justin Millette, Tufts; Sophia Sim, UMass Lowell; and Kevin Wen, MIT.

Their annual scholarships of $1500 are renewable for up to a total of four years as long as they maintain a B average and take mathematics or courses which use mathematics.  

There were four memorial scholarships this year:  Dr. Alice T  Schafer Scholarship, Lt. Catherine M. Landers, S. Ramanujan, and Michael Voolich.

                 Nasreen Kaur, Dr. Alice T Schafer Scholarship winner

One of the scholarships was given in the memory of an outstanding woman mathematician, Dr. Alice T Schafer.  Nasreen Kaur was awarded the Alice T Schafer Memorial Scholarship, she is planning on majoring computer engineering at Boston University.

Dr. Schafer (1915 - 2009) was orphaned as an infant and raised by two aunts.  When she went to college at the University of Richmond of Virginia, women students weren’t allowed in the library and she was discouraged from majoring in mathematics.  She won prizes, earned a PhD, taught at colleges (including Wellesley) and among the things she is known for is helping start the Association for Women in Mathematics (1971).  

Less known about Dr. Schafer was her role helping to start the Somerville Mathematics Fund in 2000 -- attending all of the planning meetings and contributing to their work as long as she was able.  She is remembered for her passion and work to insure mathematical opportunities for women. Since Dr. Schafer was committed to the education and supporting women in mathematics, Nasreen’s majoring in computer science is a wonderful way to honor Dr. Alice Schafer's memory.

                 Samiyra Afife, Lt. Catherine M Landers Scholarship winner

The Lt. Catherine M. Landers Memorial Scholarship was awarded to Samiyra Afife.  Samiyra has in interest in health and human biology.  When Lt. Landers (1920 - 2012) wanted to go to nursing school (graduating in 1942), her grandmother opened a cedar chest were she had been saving dollar bills to help pay for her granddaughter’s education.  Lt Landers won a Bronze Star for her service during WW2, where she ran a field hospital outside Paris; she was about to be shipped to the far East when WW2 ended and so she boarded a transport ship for the USA instead.   Jay Landers and Jasper Lawson donated a scholarship in her memory, honoring her commitment to education. Samiyra's interest in health is a wonderful way to honor Lt. Landers' commitment to education.

                    Kevin Wen, S. Ramanujan Scholarship winner

Our newest named scholarship is in memory of S. Ramanujan, it is a gift from the Jha Family and is awarded to Kevin Wen who is planning on attending MIT.  Kevin wants a career in therapeutics where he can create drugs and medical therapies to help people.  Srinivasa Ramanujan (1887 - 1920) was a mostly self-taught brilliant Indian mathematician who sadly died young.  He discovered his love of mathematics while in high school when he found a book that listed 4000 mathematical theorems without information on they were discovered or developed. So he continued his math work, often on a slate, only recording his concluding theorem on paper when finished, without the details of how he came to the conclusion.  With his humble beginnings and no formal mathematical training, the story of his life and how he finally connected with the well-known mathematicians of his day is detailed the book and movie, The Man Who Knew Infinity. That book inspired the Jha family who gave your scholarship in his honor. Ramanujan’s notebooks and papers have included both previously discovered and new mathematical theorems many in number theory.  These notebooks have continued to provide mathematicians with material to study and try to figure out how Ramanujan discovered these theorems and to see if they were provable.  Kevin did original research on impact of plastic pollution. His original work is a way to honor S. Ramanujan  

            Henry Ayanna, who is appropriately attired for someone with 
            a love of music, Michael Voolich scholarship winner

The Michael Voolich Memorial Scholarship was awarded to Henry Ayanna who is interested in both science and music at Harvard U.  Michael Voolich (1943 - 2019) was a person who was interested in how everything worked, if Renaissance man was a job offering, Michael would have applied. He learned by asking questions and then he loved telling everyone what he had learned and how seemingly disparate things were related.  He had a career than included teaching many different subjects in local schools, none of which was math. But, he married a math teacher.  So, when the Somerville Math Fund was being discussed and organized in his living room, of course he joined the founding board.  

He liked to do things for people and of course for the math fund.  His telephone calls and trips to Table Talk Pie Company each year for city-wide Pi Night celebration were a highlight each year. He especially loved helping find things for others to donate for the Scrapheap Showdown each year and his marvelous multiple clamps will still be a necessary part of future Scrapheap challenges to come.  

Michael loved to be able to give and help others in the local community along with his extended family here and abroad. This scholarship was funded by the many people who donated in his memory to the Somerville Math Fund.  Henry’s taking the high level science classes while also performing his violin at an award winning level would clearly lead to many interesting discussions if Michael were still alive — he would want to know all about how they are related and work.

The Somerville Mathematics Fund was chartered in 2000 to celebrate and encourage achievement in mathematics in the city of Somerville, Massachusetts. It May 2011, it was recognized as the outstanding Dollars for Scholars Chapter in New England.  Since it's founding in 2000, it has awarded $505,000 in four-year mathematics scholarships to ninety-nine outstanding Somerville students.  



The link for this post is https://somervillemathematics.blogspot.com/2021/06/outstanding-students-win-somerville.html




 

Tuesday, June 23, 2020

Outstanding Students win Somerville Math Fund Scholarships

The Somerville Mathematics Fund is pleased to announce the winners of their renewable mathematics scholarships for 2020.  The Math Fund was founded to celebrate and encourage math achievement and these students deserve to be celebrated for their work in math and science while in high school. Thanks to the generosity of many individuals and a few organizations, this year we were able to award a record 8 scholarships, totaling $48,000 over four years.
The winners were in the top row: Christiana Brand, Luca Duclos-Orsello, Harmanpreet Kaur, and Timothy Labounko.
Bottom Row: Ziye OuYang, Owen Sheehy, Harmeet Singh and Jaskaran Singh

Due to COVID-19, we were unable to award the scholarships at an awards night.  The school notified the students they had won without telling them which scholarship, so they didn’t know the President of the Somerville Math Fund would be calling each of them to tell them of their award and that a letter was in the mail.

The winners are attening a variety of schools next  fall.  Christina Brand, Ziye OuYang, and Owen Sheehy will attend UMass Amherst; Luca Duclos-Orsell, Brown; Harmanpreet Kaur, MIT; Timothy Labounko, University of Southern California; Harmeet Singh, UMass Boston; and Jaskaran Singh, UMass Lowell.

Their annual scholarships of $1500 are renewable for up to a total of four years as long as they maintain a B average and take mathematics or courses which use mathematics.

There were three memorial scholarships this year:  Dr. Alice T  Schafer Scholarship, Lt. Catherine M. Landers, and Michael Voolich.

One of the scholarships was given in the memory of an outstanding woman mathematician, Dr. Alice T Schafer.  Harmanpreet Kaur was awarded the Alice T Schafer Memorial Scholarship. Harmanpreet is planning on majoring computer engineering at MIT, the school where Dr Schafer’s husband taught mathematics for many years when she was teaching mathematiacs at Wellesley College.
Dr Alice Schafer Scholarship winner Harmanpreet Kaur

Dr. Schafer (1915 - 2009) was orphaned as an infant and raised by two aunts.  When she went to college at the University of Richmond of Virginia, women students weren’t allowed in the library and she was discouraged from majoring in mathematics.  She won prizes, earned a PhD, taught at colleges (including Wellesley) and among the things she is known for is helping start the Association for Women in Mathematics (1971).

Less known about Dr. Schafer was her role helping to start the Somerville Mathematics Fund in 2000 -- attending all of the planning meetings and contributing to their work as long as she was able.  She is remembered for her passion and work to insure mathematical opportunities for women. Since Dr. Schafer was committed to the education and supporting women in mathematics, Harmanpreet’s majoring in computer science is a wonderful way to honor Dr. Alice Schafer's memory.

The Lt. Catherine M. Landers Memorial Scholarship was awarded to Jaskaran Singh. Jaskaran has in interest in statistics and is planning on majoring in business.  When Lt. Landers (1920 - 2012) wanted to go to nursing school (graduating in 1942), her grandmother opened a cedar chest were she had been saving dollar bills to help pay for her granddaughter’s education.  Lt Landers won a Bronze Star for her service during WW2, where she ran a field hospital outside Paris; she was about to be shipped to the far East when WW2 ended and so she boarded a transport ship for the USA instead.   Jay Landers and Jasper Lawson donated a scholarship in her memory, honoring her commitment to education. Jaskaran's interest business is a wonderful way to honor Lt. Landers' commitment to education.
Lt Catherine Landers Scholarship winner Jaskaran  Singh

Our newest named scholarship is in the memory of Michael Voolich.  This year it was awarded to Timothy Labounko who is planning on majoring in civil engineering at University of Southern California.  Michael Voolich (1943 - 2019) was a person who was interested in how everything worked, if Renaissance man was a job offering, Michael would have applied. He learned by asking questions and then he loved telling everyone what he had learned and how seemingly disparate things were related.  He had a career than included teaching many different subjects in local schools, none of which was math. But, he married a math teacher.  So, when the Somerville Math Fund was being discussed and organized in his living room, of course he joined the founding board.
Michael Voolich Scholarship winner Tim Labounko

He liked to do things for people and of course for the math fund.  His telephone calls and trips to Table Talk Pie Company each year for city-wide Pi Night celebration were a highlight each year. He especially loved helping find things for others to donate for the Scrapheap Showdown each year and his marvelous multiple clamps will still be a necessary part of future Scrapheap challenges to come.

Michael loved to be able to give and help others in the local community along with his extended family here and abroad. This scholarship was funded by the many people who donated in his memory to the Somerville Math Fund.  Timothy’s fascination with transportation engineering and planning would clearly lead to many interesting discussions if Michael were still alive — another student who wants to know how it works!


The Somerville Mathematics Fund was chartered in 2000 to celebrate and encourage achievement in mathematics in the city of Somerville, Massachusetts. It May 2011, it was recognized as the outstanding Dollars for Scholars Chapter in New England.  Since it's founding in 2000, it has awarded $445,000 in four-year mathematics scholarships to ninety-nine outstanding Somerville students.  Next fall, The Somerville Mathematics Fund will be seeking applications from teachers who teach in the city of Somerville who would like funding for classroom mathematics activities.  In October, the Math Fund will also be seeking high school students to compete in the annual Scrapheap Showdown.  For more information, to volunteer, or to make a tax-deductible contribution, please contact Erica Voolich (617-666-0666 or mathfund@gmail.com) or go to www.somervillemathematicsfund.org.

The link to this post: https://somervillemathematics.blogspot.com/2020/06/outstanding-students-win-somerville.html

Wednesday, August 7, 2019

Outstanding Students win Somerville Math Fund Scholarships

Monica Fernandes, Julie Schneider and Jay Landers congratulate this year's winners
at the Somerville High School Awards Night.  Left to Right: Monica Fernandes,
Charlotte Kafka-Gibbons, Ben Botner, Henry Zou, Max Nadeau, Robert McCarthy,
Bishan Rai, Simran Jeet, Isabel Silva, Julie Schneider, Jay Landers.

The Somerville Mathematics Fund is pleased to announce the winners of their renewable mathematics scholarships for 2019.  The Math Fund was founded to celebrate and encourage math achievement and these students deserve to be celebrated for their work in math and science while in high school. Thanks to the generosity of many individuals and a few organizations, this year we were able to award a record 9 scholarships, totaling $36,000 over four years.
Monica Fernandes congratulates
Smaranda Costiner.

Ben Botner and Henry Zou will attend Tufts University; Smaranda Costiner, Boston College; Simran Jeet, UMass Amherst; Charlotte Kafka-Gibbons, University of Toronto; Max Nadeau, Harvard College; Bishan Rai, Syracuse University; Isabel Silva, Northeastern University; and Robert McCarthy’s choice remains a deep dark mystery.

Their annual scholarships of $1000 are renewable for up to a total of four years as long as they maintain a B average and take mathematics or courses which use mathematics.

There were three scholarships named for outstanding women this year:  Dr. Alice T  Schafer Scholarship, Lt. Catherine M. Landers, and the Falstein-Schneider You can Count on Yourself Scholarship.
Monica Fernandes congratulates Charlotte Kafka-Gbbons
on winning the Dr. Alice T Schedule Scholarship for
outstanding work in math and science.
One of the scholarships was given in the memory of an outstanding woman mathematician, Dr. Alice T Schafer.  Monica Fernandes award the Dr.Alice T Schafer Scholarship to Charlotte Kafka-Gibbons. Charlotte is planing on majoring in neuroscience.  Dr. Schafer (1915 - 2009) was orphaned as an infant and raised by two aunts.  When she went to college at the University of Richmond of Virginia, women students weren’t allowed in the library and she was discouraged from majoring in mathematics.  She won prizes, earned a PhD, taught at colleges (including Wellesley) and among the things she is known for is helping start the Association for Women in Mathematics (1971).

Less known about Dr. Schafer was her role helping to start the Somerville Mathematics Fund in 2000 -- attending all of the planning meetings and contributing to their work as long as she was able.  She is remembered for her passion and work to insure mathematical opportunities for women. Since Dr. Schafer was committed to the education and supporting women in mathematics, Charlotte’s interest in studying the brain with a major in neuroscience is a wonderful way to honor Dr. Alice Schafer's memory.
Jay Landers awarded Max Nadeau the Lt Catherrine M Landers
Scholarship for outstanding working in math and science.
Jay Landers awarded  Max Nadeau the Lt. Catherine M. Landers Scholarship.  Max is planning on majoring in computer and data science to apply artificial intelligence to solving environmental problems. When Lt. Landers (1920 - 2012) wanted to go to nursing school (graduating in 1942), her grandmother opened a cedar chest were she had been saving dollar bills to help pay for her granddaughter’s education.  Lt Landers won a Bronze Star for her service during WW2, where she ran a field hospital outside Paris; she was about to be shipped to the far East when WW2 ended and so she boarded a transport ship for the USA instead.   Jay Landers and Jasper Lawson donated a scholarship in her memory, honoring her commitment to education. Max's interest in solving environmental problems is a wonderful way to honor Lt. Landers' commitment to education.
Julie Schneider congratulates Isabel Silva for
winning the Falstein-Schneider You can Count on Yourself
scholarship for outstanding work in math and science.
Julie Schneider awarded Isabel Silva the Falstein-Schneider You can  Count on Yourself Scholarship, which Falstein and her partner Julie Schneider created to recognize outstanding local math students.  As Falstein wrote, “We are delighted to offer this scholarship to honor our families and the philosophy we believe promotes success in understanding, appreciating, and using mathematics.”  Falstein also wrote, “We value Somerville, and believe in the potential of our young people to make the world a better and more peaceful place for everyone.  We hope this small contribution is helpful to this talented Somerville resident.

You Can Count On Yourself is the sub-title of a Falstein-authored text that serves as the curriculum for a math program she created at UMass Boston. The phrase describes the theory behind the program empowering adults to develop a foundation in understanding basic mathematics.  People who understand math notation and expect it to make sense, are more likely to enjoy and achieve success using the language of quantification.  Isabel Silva is planning on becoming a math teacher — what better way to honor Falstein who developed this curriculum to help her math students at UMass Boston.

The Somerville Mathematics Fund was chartered in 2000 to celebrate and encourage achievement in mathematics in the city of Somerville, Massachusetts. It May 2011, it was recognized as the outstanding Dollars for Scholars Chapter in New England.  Since it's founding in 2000, it has awarded $356,000 in mathematics scholarships to outstanding Somerville students.  Next fall, The Somerville Mathematics Fund will be seeking applications from teachers who teach in the city of Somerville who would like funding for classroom mathematics activities.  In October, the Math Fund will also be seeking high school students to compete in the annual Scrapheap Showdown.  For more  information, to volunteer, or to make a tax-deductible contribution, please contact Erica Voolich (617-666-0666 or mathfund@gmail.com) or go to www.somervillemathematicsfund.org.

The link to this page is https://somervillemathematics.blogspot.com/2019/08/outstanding-students-win-somerville.html
©Erica Dakin Voolich


Monday, October 30, 2017

Scrapheap Showdown 2017: Get Over It!


On October 29, 30 high school students on 10 teams gathered in “The Cage” in Cousens Gym at Tufts University to compete in the 13th annual Scrapheap Showdown.  Instead of the usual interesting “junk” in the center of the room when the students walked in, there were piles of paper along with large cones of string.  The students were given their challenge: to design and build a four-foot-span paper bridge. The teams worked intensely, designing, building, testing, reinforcing, and adjusting their bridges.

Time was called after 3 hours.  Now was the time for the competition.  


Each of the ten bridges employed differences in design from suspension to trestles and combinations of other features.    The students' bridges competed against each other, tested for their ability to withstand “traffic” — a remote-controlled car driven across. 


Their bridges’ centers were measured for height above the table with points given for each inch above the table height up to 6 inches. The third challenge involved supporting maximum weight spread over the span of the bridge with minimal deflection.  A bamboo skewer was placed in the middle of the bridge.  The change height of the bridge could be measured by the displacement machine built by Richard Graf for a previous Scrapheap Showdown. 
Richard Graf with his machine to measure deflection to 1/16"

The bridges were going to be measured to two inches of deflection from adding weighs spread across the span of the bridge road bead.  The winning bridge was able to support more than 108 pounds with less than two inches of deflection in the center of the roadbed. 
108 lbs and counting!
Wall tiles, metal weights, and barbells
and still not deflecting more than 1"!


The 2nd place team was able to support 82 pounds.


The team with the highest overall score, was Crimson Quackateers  (Owen Chiu, Daniel Correa, Jeffery Zou). 
The Crimson Quackateers with their winning bridge.

 The second place team was the Honeybees (Tristan Brown-Vazquez, Max Nadeau, Nikolas Protopapas).  
The Honeybees with their bridge.

Third place was the Shrimps (Kenia Arbaiza, Kristina Gurung and Tayara Romero).  

The Shrimps with their bridge.

The Fourth place team was Team Take Dubs Part 2. (Qijin Chau, Gabe Kafka-Gibbons, Samuel Saron).  
Team Take Dubs, part 2 with their bridge.


Fifth place was Striking Panthers (Desi Feldman, Robert Lavey).
The Striking Panthers with their bridge.


The teams could choose their prize in the order they finished.    
The prizes donated were:  three $100 gift cards (donated by Anne Button), four Red Sox tickets (donated by Sam Voolich), three $50 RedBones BBQ gift cards, 3 $50 Amazon gift cards (donated by Jay Landers & Jasper Lawson) and a combination of Museum passes (4 Science Museum including 4 to the Omni Theater, 2 Museum of Fine Arts and 2 Children’s Museum, donated by Vinny Tajeda & Maggie Rabidou). 



There was a prize for aesthetics sponsored by Jay Landers, it was a hard choice to choose the “best looking” but the winners were the Striking Panthers.

The other teams participating were Lady Highlanders (YuYing Chen, Priscila Ponce, Leslie Nava Sanchez),
Lady Highlanders with their bridge

Dumbledore's Army (Harmanpreet Kaur, Nasreen Kaur, Willow Klein), 
Dumbledore's Army with their bridge.

Team Bulldogs (Cole LaFee, John Minghetti, Dillion Tivnan), 
Team Bulldogs with their bridge.

 Team Team (Aaron Diener, Sam Diener, Dennis Gill), 
Team Team with their bridge.

The X-Man (Zachary Dion, Luca Duclos-Orsello, Kevin Pleitez).
The X-Men with their bridge.
This event was for both fundraising and an intellectual challenge--all funds raised go towards a Somerville Mathematics Fund scholarship for an outstanding Somerville mathematics student.  All competitors and volunteers went home with Scrapheap Showdown teeshirts donated by Gerald and Debra Bickoff of Commercial Cleaning Service.  


Designers & refiners of the challenge were: Anne Button, Chase Duclos-Orsello, Zachary Faubion, Adam Foster, Monica Fernandes, Miriam Gates, Richard Graf, Jay Landers, Zbigniew Nitecki, Erica Voolich, and Michael Voolich.  


Stanhope Framers donated the foam core.  Fleming Printing Co. donated the “roadbeds” made from chipboard, Michael Morgan and Patricia Murphey-Sheehy, teachers at Somerville High School, recruited student teams.  Amy Weiss designed the T-shirts and Yongkang Yu designed the poster advertising the event at the high school.  


Sponsors of the event included Winter Hill Bank, RedBones BBQ, CliftonLarsonAllen LLP, Commercial Cleaning Service, Jay & Jasper, Susan Weiss, and our most wonderful host, Tufts University.  Various members of the Board worked on all aspects of organizing the event and worked to make it a success along with community volunteers Tony Johnson and Clarissa Westney.


The Somerville Mathematics Fund was chartered in 2000 to celebrate and encourage mathematics achievement in Somerville.  In January, they will be looking for teacher grant applications; and in April, they will be looking for scholarship applications.   For more information or to volunteer or to make a donation, call 617-666-0666, e-mail mathfund@gmail.com, or go to www.somervillemathematicsfund.org.

Thursday, June 15, 2017

Outstanding Students win Somerville Math Fund Scholarships

Jiahui Zhao, David Matthews, Christina Keating, Lily Chau, Camille Chan,
Manogya Acharya, Alice Egar, and  Anmol Maini are congratulated by Erica Voolich

The Somerville Mathematics Fund is pleased to announce the winners of their renewable mathematics scholarships for 2017.  The Math Fund was founded to celebrate and encourage math achievement and these students deserve to be celebrated for their work in math and science while in high school. Thanks to the generosity of many individuals and a few organizations, this year we were able to award a record 8 scholarships, totaling $32,000 over four years.

Manogya Acharya will attend Boston College; Camille Chan, Tufts University; Lily Chau and Jiahui Zhao, U Mass Amherst; Alice Egar, Princeton University; Christina Keating, U Mass Lowell; Anmol Maini, MIT; and David Matthews, the University of Vermont.

Their scholarships of $1000 are renewable for up to a total of four years as long as they maintain a B average and take mathematics or courses which use mathematics.

One of the scholarships was given in the memory of an outstanding woman mathematician, Dr. Alice T Schafer scholarship and another scholarship in honor of the founders of a local scholarship organization which grew into a national scholarship charity.

Erica Voolich congratulates Alice Egar on winning the Dr. Alice Schafer Scholarship

Alice Egar won the Alice T Schafer Scholarship.  She is planning to study biology, and eventually earning a PhD.   Dr. Schafer (1915 - 2009) was orphaned as an infant and raised by two aunts.  When she went to college at the University of Richmond of Virginia, women students weren’t allowed in the library and she was discouraged from majoring in mathematics.  She won prizes, earned a PhD, taught at colleges (including Wellesley) and among the things she is known for is helping start the Association for Women in Mathematics (1971).  Less known about Dr. Schafer was her helping to start the Somerville Mathematics Fund in 2000 -- attending all of the planning meetings and contributing to their work as long as she was able.  She is remembered for her passion and work to insure mathematical opportunities for women. Since Dr. Schafer was committed to the education and supporting women in mathematics, Alice Egar’s interest in doing original research is a wonderful way to honor Dr. Alice Schafer's memory.

Erica Voolich congratulates Anmol Maini on winning
the Charlotte and Dr. Irving Fradkin Scholarship

Anmol Maini received the Charlotte and Dr. Irving Fradkin Scholarship.  You can read the story of Dr. Fradkin’s (and his dear wife Charlotte who worked behind the scenes to help make his dream possible) at https://scholarshipamerica.org/fradkin/
Dr. Fradkin was the founder of Dollars for Scholars, and in April 2013 retired from Scholarship America the parent organization after 50 years, and recently died in 2016.  Anmol vision of the role of mathematics in all areas of science make him a perfect recipient of this award.

The Somerville Mathematics Fund was chartered in 2000 to celebrate and encourage achievement in mathematics in the city of Somerville, Massachusetts. It May 2011, it was recognized as the outstanding Dollars for Scholars Chapter in New England.  Since it's founding, it has awarded $292,000 in mathematics scholarships to outstanding Somerville students.  Next fall, The Somerville Mathematics Fund will be seeking applications from teachers who teach in the city of Somerville who would like funding for classroom mathematics activities.  In October, the Math Fund will also be seeking high school students to compete in the annual Scrapheap Showdown.  For more  information, to volunteer, or to make a tax-deductible contribution, please contact Erica Voolich (617-666-0666 or mathfund@gmail.com) or go to www.somervillemathematicsfund.org.


The link to this page is http://somervillemathematics.blogspot.com/2017/06/outstanding-students-win-somerville.html
©2017 Erica Dakin Voolich