Bluffton mathematics graduates have found positions in business, industry, actuarial mathematics, teaching and graduate school. Others have found careers in other professional positions as diverse as law, music and the pastorate.
| Meron Dibia '12 The Bluffton senior has been selected by the National Computational Science Institute as one of this year’s 17 Blue Waters Undergraduate Petascale interns. The 2011-12 internship recipients were chosen from a nation-wide applicant pool of 122 and will each receive a $5,000 scholarship. Meron attended NCSI’s two-week institute of training in high-performance computing at Illinois’ National Center for Supercomputing Applications. After working full-time this summer with mentor and Bluffton professor Steve Harnish on molecular dynamics simulations at the Ohio Supercomputer Center, Meron will refine and extend her work in mathematical physics during the 2011-12 academic year. An important component of this internship will be interviews with experts in materials science and engineering, mathematical physics and high performance computing in the state and region. This research will culminate in Meron’s poster presentation at the SC’11 conference in Seattle and a published report in the Journal of Computational Science Education at the completion of the internship in May 2012. |
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Don Diller '65 |
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Mary Good '11 Mathematics major Good made a presentation at the meetings about a group project at Miami’s Summer Undergraduate Mathematical Sciences Research Institute (SUMSRI). read more... |
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Will Stemen '63 Mathematics major Will Stemen ’63 and his wife, Karis, had been on several service trips with their church to Swaziland. read more... |
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Ken Geisinger '60 Mathematics major “The last thing I ever thought I’d major in, following high school, was math.” Ken originally though art would be his area and spent one year in an industrial design program at Pratt Institute before realizing art wasn’t for him. “Bluffton gave me a chance after my Army discharge, and Professor Luther Shetler had a way of making math interesting, understandable and enjoyable.” read more... |
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Otto Burgess '82 Mathematics major "I declared a math major as a junior and was going to be a teacher, but I didn't find the curriculum appealing, so I took all computer science classes my last year," says Otto. He came to a realization that a combination of math, science and computer science would allow him to do just about anything he wanted. read more... |