Madison Math Circle: Difference between revisions
Line 18: | Line 18: | ||
=More information= | =More information= | ||
==Directions and parking== | ==Directions and parking== | ||
Meetings are held in 120 Ingraham Hall | Meetings are held in 120 Ingraham Hall. | ||
<div class="center" style="width:auto; margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto;"> | |||
[[File: Ingraham_Map.jpg|300px]]</div> <p> | |||
If you are a student, we hope you will tell other interested students about these talks, and speak with your parents or with your teacher about organizing a car pool to the UW campus (and tell us how many people are coming so we can purchase the appropriate amount of pizza!) | If you are a student, we hope you will tell other interested students about these talks, and speak with your parents or with your teacher about organizing a car pool to the UW campus (and tell us how many people are coming so we can purchase the appropriate amount of pizza!) |
Revision as of 20:05, 25 June 2014
Weekly Meeting
Our weekly meeting is Monday at 6pm in 120 Ingraham Hall. See below for directions.
What is a Math Circle?
The Madison Math Circle is a weekly series of mathematically based activities aimed at interested middle school and high school students. It is an outreach program organized by the UW Math Department. Our goal is to provide a taste of exciting ideas in math and science. In the past we've had talks about plasma and weather in outer space, video game graphics, and encryption. In the sessions, students (and parents) are often asked to explore problems on their own, with the presenter facilitating a discussion.
The level of the audience varies quite widely, including a mix of middle school and high school students, and the speakers generally address this by considering subjects that will be interesting for a wide range of students.
After each talk we'll have pizza provided by the Mathematics Department, and students will have an opportunity to mingle and chat with the speaker and with other participants, to ask questions about some of the topics that have been discussed, and also about college, careers in science, etc.
The Madison Math circle was featured in Wisconsin State Journal: http://host.madison.com/wsj/news/local/education/local_schools/school-spotlight-madison-math-circle-gives-young-students-a-taste/article_77f5c042-0b3d-11e1-ba5f-001cc4c03286.html
More information
Directions and parking
Meetings are held in 120 Ingraham Hall.
If you are a student, we hope you will tell other interested students about these talks, and speak with your parents or with your teacher about organizing a car pool to the UW campus (and tell us how many people are coming so we can purchase the appropriate amount of pizza!)
If you are a parent or a teacher, we hope you'll tell your students about these talks and organize a car pool to the UW (all talks take place in Ingraham Hall room 120, on the UW-Madison campus).
Parking. Parking on campus is rather limited. Here is as list of some options:
- Directly in front of Ingraham hall, 2 metered spots (25 minute max) in Lot 11 off of Observatory Drive.
- A 0.2 mile walk to Ingraham Hall via these directions, many spots (free starting 4:30pm) in Lot 26 along Observatory Drive.
- A 0.3 mile walk to Ingraham Hall via these directions, many spots (free starting 4:30pm) in Lot 34.
- A 0.2 mile walk to Ingraham Hall via these directions, 2 metered spots (25 minute max) in front of Lathrop Hall.
- A 0.3 mile walk to Ingraham Hall via these directions 6 metered spots (25 minute max) around the loop in front of Chadbourne Hall .
- For more information, see the UW-Madison Parking Info website.
Email list
Sign up for our email list: https://lists.math.wisc.edu/listinfo/math-circle
Contact the organizers
If you have any questions, suggestions for topics, or so on, just email the organizers (Carolyn Abbot, Lalit Jain, Ryan Julian, Daniel Erman, Gheorghe Craciun, and Philip Matchett Wood): math-circle-organizers@math.wisc.edu. We are always interested in feedback!
Report on Math Circle in 2013-14
Coming soon!
Flyer
Coming soon!
Help us grow!
If you like Math Circle, please help us continue to grow! Students, parents, and teachers can help by:
- Posting our flyer at schools or anywhere that might have interested students
- Discussing the Math Circle with students, parents, teachers, administrators, and more
- Making an announcement about Math Circle at PTO meetings
- Donating to Math Circle
Contact the organizers if you have questions or your own ideas about how to help out.
Meetings for Fall 2014 and Spring 2015
All talks are at 6pm in Ingraham Hall room 120, unless otherwise noted.
Fall 2014 | |||
---|---|---|---|
Date and RSVP links | Speaker | Topic | Link for more info |
Septmeber 8, 2014 | Philip Matchett Wood | Pictures and Puzzles | |
Septmeber 15, 2014 | TBA | Coming soon! | |
Septmeber 22, 2014 | TBA | Coming soon! | |
Septmeber 29, 2014 | TBA | Coming soon! | |
October 6, 2014 | TBA | Coming soon! | |
October 13, 2014 | TBA | Coming soon! | |
October 20, 2014 | TBA | Coming soon! | |
October 27, 2014 | TBA | Coming soon! | |
November 3, 2014 | TBA | Coming soon! | |
November 10, 2014 | TBA | Coming soon! | |
November 17, 2014 | TBA | Coming soon! | |
November 24, 2014 | TBA | Coming soon! | |
Spring 2015 | |||
January | TBA | Coming soon! |
Abstracts
Philip Matchett Wood
Pictures and Puzzles
Abstract: When does a simple picture solve a tricky puzzle? Come and learn about the mathematics of line-and-dot puzzles!
Speaker TBA
Title TBA
Abstract: TBA.
Archived Math Circle Material
Link for presenters (in progress)
[[1]]