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Dept. of Mathematics
College of Arts & Sciences
University of South Florida
4202 E. Fowler Ave., PHY114
Tampa, FL 33620
(813) 974-9550
mccolm@cas.usf.edu
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Teaching &c.:
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This fall, I will be the organizer for the Discrete Mathematics Seminar, which is also
a section of the Graduate Seminar (MAT 6939) open to graduate students for three hours
credit (see me for details).
In this seminar, speakers speak about mathematical topics ranging from the theory of
computation to algebraic topology, from mathematical logic to graph theory; for a
sample, see the
announcement page for last spring.
We will be meeting every Monday from 3:05 to 3:55 in PHY 013.
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This fall, I will be teaching
Advanced Linear Algebra (MAS 5107),
currently scheduled for Monday and Wednesday afternoons, 4:35 - 5:50 pm.
The text will be the extravagantly priced
Linear Algebra by Hoffman & Kunze, although more reasonably priced
copies (starting at $ 50 or so used) are available from
Amazon,
Barnes & Noble,
Alibris, and other sources of used books.
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In spring, 2009, I will be teaching a graduate Selected Topics course in Applied
Euclidean Geometry for people interested in the analysis and design of
meso- and nano-structures -- but also open to people interested in larger objects, or
even in two and three dimensional geometry for its own sake.
The course is currently being designed, but it will consist of topics in low-dimension
geometry and topology, in particular symmetries (polyhedra, tilings and crystals and
other periodic patterns) and building complexes.
The course is designed for mathematically proficient natural science and engineering
graduate students.
As for prerequisites, although we will review the necessary linear algebra in the
beginning of the course, it is strongly advised that students already have some
experience with vectors and matrices.
(There will be a lot of advanced algebra in this course; while students are not required
to know this algebra in advance -- it will be presented in class -- students will need
sufficient "mathematical maturity" to be able to deal with abstract concepts.
By "abstract concepts, I mean the stuff that appears in abstract algebra, set theory and
logic, discrete mathematics or graph theory or combinatorics, or the theory of data types.)
It is currently scheduled for MWF 10:45-11:35.
Taking College Courses
I have written some pages, for math students (and teachers) in general, on homework, texts,
grading, etc.
(Some of these pages may be of interest to people in other fields as well.)
To go to these pages, start at my main page on
taking college classes.
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I was trained as a mathematical logician, with an emphasis on theoretical
computer science.
My specialty was, and still is, finite model theory.
I have working on combinatorial games and the evolution of random
structures; I am also interested in emergent and hierarchical phenomena.
However, I am now doing increasingly geometric work, with applications of
algebra.
But this transition is not reflected in my site, so here is my somewhat
stale
Research
Page.
I will try to catch up asap.
Destinations
Back to the USF Department of Mathematics Home Page
Back to the USF College of Arts and Sciences Home Page
Back to the USF Home page
Legalities (© 1999 - 2008):
All material on this web-site is protected by U.S. copyright laws.
It may be used (and reproduced electronically, or as hardcopy copies)
for educational or charitable or other non-profit purposes as
long as pages are reproduced in toto and properly attributed.
However, please do not post copies of this material: put in links to
it instead.
For permissions, contact me
This page last updated June 2008.
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Math Programs
The Mathematics Department offers a mathematics major for bachelor's
students and a M.A./B.A.
program that allows one to get both degrees in about five years.
In addition, we offer a Ph.D.
Our primary research areas are in various areas in analysis,
probability and statistics, and various areas of discrete mathematics.
For more information on these programs,
click here.
The Mathematics Department is also a partner in the new Master's Program
in
bioinformatics,
which involves the design and analysis of very large molecules, especially
pharmaceuticals, proteins, and DNA.
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United Faculty
The faculty of a university is the university.
Alas, many universities are controlled
by an administration which often behaves
like the shortsighted management of a business concern.
So faculty have must organize to protect their interests
and the long-term interests of the university.
Florida State University System faculty are represented by the
United Faculty of
Florida, which, via the Florida
Education Association, is a merged affiliate of the
National Education Association
and the
American Federation of Teachers
(the latter being an affiliate of the
American Federation of Labor
/ Congress of Industrial Organizations).
USF faculty are represented by the local
chapter of the UFF, which also has an
off-campus site.
I am the editor of the USF Chapter newsletter Uncommon Sense
and the web-master of the chapter
website.
Here is an MS Word file for
a membership application to join UFF.
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Mathematics Clubs
There are several major organizations in the U.S.A. concerned with
mathematics.
One of these, the Mathematical Association
of America has a chapter here at USF, which meets weekly.
Members get subscriptions to mathematics journals, plus other goodies,
and student memberships are inexpensive.
(It also looks good on resumes.)
Students interested in joining the USF MAA are encouraged to contact
Fernando Burgos.
Other major mathematical organizations include:
And there are more specialized organizations, such as the
Association for Symbolic Logic and the
European Association for Theoretical Computer Science.
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USF Faculty Senate
I am a member of the USF Faculty Senate, serving a 3-year
term from 2002 to 2005; I have been re-elected to serve
from 2005 to 2008.
(Technically speaking, I represent faculty in the College
of Arts and Sciences.)
Any faculty members with concerns that they believe the
Senate should or could address can contact me at
mccolm@cas.usf.edu.
See also the
Faculty Senate website.
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Mathematics Awards
There are several awards in mathematics research.
Here are some of the most important.
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Probably the most important award in mathematics is the
Abel Prize,
the closest thing to a Nobel in mathematics, and clearly
set up by the Norwegians with an eye towards Stockholm,
which had had its chance.
This prize is relatively new, so many people aren't used
to it, instead they are aware of...
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The
Fields Prize,
a junior achievement award.
It is awarded to researchers under 40 whose stellar work
shows the greatest potential, and is often misleadingly
called the mathematical equivalent to the Nobel.
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Computer scientists have their own awards, the most
important probably being the
Turing Award.
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Speaking of Nobel's, the Swedish Academy has a sort of
mini-Nobel for those areas (like mathematics) not
covered by the Nobel, the
Crafoord Prize.
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Meanwhile, the Israelis also have a prize in some areas,
including mathematics, the
Wolf Prize.
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Muddying the waters is the Clay Mathematics Institute,
which is offering $ 1 million each for seven
Millenium Problems.
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Writing
There are several writer's groups in the Tampa Bay area, and
amateur writers (like myself) can get feedback from fellow
amateurs (and occasional professionals) by joining in.
Groups in Tampa including the
Tampa
Writer's Alliance, an independent organization.
And I am the editor of three newsletters:
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The
Quaternion,
the annual newsletter of the USF Department of Mathematics.
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The
Uncommon Sense,
the periodic hardcopy newsletter of the USF Chapter of the
United Faculty of Florida.
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The
UFF Biweekly (scroll to the bottom of the page),
the electronic fortnightly newsletter of the USF Chapter of
the United Faculty of Florida.
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Lecture Series
The Mathematics Department presents the R. Kent Nagle Memorial
Lecture Series, in which we bring eminent scholars to USF to
speak to the public about subjects mathematical.
For more information,
click here.
This series is one of many series that this and other departments
are supporting to reach out to the community.
For other programs of this kind,
click here.
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