AWM and Math for America are organising a Student Essay Contest on Mathematics. The deadline for submission is February 2025.

About the Contest

To increase awareness of women’s ongoing contributions to the mathematical sciences, the Association for Women in Mathematics (AWM) andΒ Math for AmericaΒ  co-sponsor an essay contest for biographies of contemporary women mathematicians and statisticians in academic, industrial, and government careers. The essays will be based primarily on an interview with a womanΒ currently working in or retired from a mathematical sciences career.Β Participation is open to middle school, high school, and undergraduate students.

Student Essay Contest on Mathematics by AWM and Math for America
Student Essay Contest on Mathematics by AWM and Math for America

Categories

This essay contest is open to students in the following categories:

  • Grades 6 – 8
  • Grades 9 – 12
  • Undergraduate

At least one winning submission will be chosen from each category.

Judgement Criteria

Your essay should be based primarily on an interview you conduct with a woman currently working in or retired from a mathematical career.

  • The submission must be in essay form, not just a transcript of your interview.
  • The essay should be approximately 500 to 1000 words in length.
  • Essays will be judged by a panel of mathematicians on content, grammar, and presentation.

Essay Subject

You may interview and write about any woman currently working in or retired from a mathematical sciences career with a small number of exceptions (listed below).  Here are some suggestions for finding possible women to interview:

  • To find out about mathematical careers, you can look at the resources at theΒ Bureau of Labor StatisticsΒ website, theΒ SIAMΒ website, or theΒ ASAΒ website. Try contacting a woman in one of these industries!
  • To find mathematicians from underrepresented minorities, you may want to try the website for the National Association of Mathematicians (NAM), the National Society of Black Engineers (NSBE), the Society for Advancement of Chicanos and Native Americans in Science (SACNAS),Β Lathisms, Mathematically Gifted & Black (MGB), orΒ Indigenous Mathematicians.
  • Look for mathematicians who are active on social media.
  • Math teachers.
  • Professors in mathematics at a local college or university (you can try looking up the school’s website and looking for the mathematics department; many departments list their faculty and their email addresses).
  • Consider other mathematical departments at colleges and universities, such as applied mathematics, computer science, statistics, physics, engineering, finance, etc.

If you would like to be put in contact with someone who has agreed to be interviewed for this contest, please fill outΒ this Google Form. Please note that requests received by January 10 each year can only be accommodated.

Ineligible Participants

A few women are not eligible as essay subjects. These individuals are:

  • subjects of essays that have won a Grand Prize, First Place, or Honorable Mention in the past four years,
  • the President, President-Elect,Β Past President, and Executive Director of the AWM, and
  • current AWM Essay Contest Committee members.

A complete list of ineligible women can be found here.

Suggested Interview Questions

The following questions are suggestions for what to ask your interviewee during the interview:

  • What motivated your interviewee to pursue a career in the mathematical sciences?
  • What is your interviewee’s educational, family and cultural background?
  • What kind of work does she do?
  • Does she have any advice to students who are interested in pursuing a career in the mathematical sciences?
  • What are your interviewee’s hobbies?

These questions are just starting points! Use them as a guide, but ask other questions based on your interests or what you know about your interviewee’s interests and experiences, too. You should also follow up with more questions based on your interviewee’s responses to make this more of a conversation. Speaking in person, over the phone, or in a videoconference instead of e-mailing will make it easier for you two to respond to each other.

All submissions become the property of the Association for Women in Mathematics.

Submission Packet

A valid submission will contain the following information:

  • A biographical essay of approximately 500 – 1000 words in length, based primarily on an interview you conduct with a woman currently working in or retired from a mathematical career;
  • A short (approximately 100 words) biographical sketch of the student contestant. This biographical sketch can be written in the first person, and it should include the student’s name, grade level, school, and mathematical interests;
  • Information about the student:
    • student’s name;
    • address of student (or parent);
    • phone number or email address of student (or parent);
  • Information about the subject of the biography:
    • name;
    • phone number and/or email address.

Awards

  • There is one First Place Winner in each category (Grades 6-8, Grades 9-12, and Undergraduate) and a Grand Prize Winner chosen from among those three First Place Winners. There are also typically 0-3 Honorable Mentions in each category.
  • The winners (including honorable mentions) receive a monetary prize, a membership in the Association for Women in Mathematics, a certificate, and their name and affiliation published in the Newsletter for the AWM.Β  In addition, all of the essays are published online and the Grand Prize winnerβ€˜s essay is published in the AWM Newsletter.

How to Submit?

Submissions will open onΒ MathPrograms.orgΒ in December 2024.

Deadline

The deadline for submission is February, 2025.

Contact

If you have any questions, please contact the AWM Essay Contest Organizer, Dr. Johanna Franklin (johanna[dot]n[dot]franklin[at]hofstra[dot]edu).

Click here for the official notification of the Student Essay Contest on Mathematics by AWM and Math for America

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