Web Pages for Math Students
Contents


The WU Math Majors/Minors Handbook
Local Links
Local Interest and Local Trivia
Professional Associations and Career Opportunities
Looking for Graduate Programs?
Undergraduate Study/Internship Opportunities--Academic Year or Summer
Math History Sites
Contests and Problems
Math Miscellany



 
Local Links
 
Math Department Home Page

Washington University Libraries

The Mathematics Library
From a WU computer, you can access here all back issues of the American Mathematical Monthly (and about a dozen other journals) beginning in the 19th century, up to 1996:  from the Library's page, select the JSTOR link (under "Full Text Sources"), and then select "Browse." 

The WU Career Center Page

 

 
Local Interest and Local Trivia
 
Math Gets its Due  A St. Louis Post Dispatch article about mathematics as a career (from Sunday February 19, 2006), with mentions of several WU faculty and graduate students.

Department Faculty
The Struggle to End Homelessness joint work of  Professor Carol North (W.U. School of Medicine), Professor David Pollio (George Warren Brown School of Social Work), and the Math Department's Professor Edward Spitznagel.
Mathematics and Plastic Surgery  (work of Prof. Steven Krantz)
Collaboration, computers changing the nature of mathematical proofs, a WU Record article with Professor Steve Krantz
Can Mathematicians Learn to Write?  An article about Professor Steven Krant
The Deborah and Franklin Terrer Haimo Award  to Professor Edward Spitznagel
The Beauty of Pure Mathematics and Professor John McCarthy
Mathematics and Radiation Oncology   (Work of Professor Victor Wickerhauser)
         
Professor Ron Freiwald
   A WU Record article about Prof. Ron Freiwald              

How did the Washington University get its name?

The Math Department's building, Cupples I, is named after whom?

Which math professor, in 2002,  won the Deborah and Franklin Tepper Haimo Award for Distinguished College
or University Teaching of Mathematics?

What math professor was also a Chancellor of Washington University?

The Ross R. Middlemiss Math Majors' Lounge: Who was Ross R. Middlemiss?

What 19th Century Terrorist Studied Math at WU ?

A bust of what mathematician sits between Cupples I and Crow Halls?

What do you know about the only statue of George Washington on campus?

What do you know about your Alma Mater?

Who designed the speed bumps on Hoyt Drive?

Other historical facts about the university.

Read about the new portrait of Professor Guido Weiss in Cupples I Hall (look above the entrance to room 199)


 
Professional Associations and Related Information
Career Opportunities and Jobs 
 
AMS Undergraduate Page  Good information about graduate school, summer programs, special semsters, jobs and interships, etc.  Worth visiting.

Mathematical Association of America (MAA) Student Page
Information about summer opportunities,careers, career profiles of people working in math related  jobs, links to other sites, ...

Online Job Information and Listing Services
This list is maintained by the American Mathematical Society (AMS).

The Association for Women in Mathematics (AWM)

Other Sites for Women in Mathematics



 The SIAM (Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics) Student Page.
This site also has information about short term and summer jobs.

Careers in Applied Mathematics (SIAM)

A Mathematical Applications Index
        A SIAM site of applications provided by working applied mathematicians.

Should You Prepare Differently for a Nonacademic Career?
        Written for graduate students. but the same general principles apply to undergraduates.

Project for Nonacademic Employment
        A joint AMS-MAA-SIAM project to inform students about jobs in nonacademic settings.



The Society of Actuaries (SOA)

        The home pages of both the SOA and the CAS (below) contain information useful to students interested in actuarial careers.  The SOA page also contains information about the actuarial exams.

The Casualty Actuarial Society (CAS)

Be An Actuary: Information about careers in actuarial work, maintained by the SOA and CAS.

Actuaries at the Social Security Administration: the site contains information about actuarial work at the SSA; it also has a link to a number of other sites of interest to actuaries and actuarial students

Information from The Actuarial Grads Network

Actuarial Exams:  information about the exam process, sample exams, and application forms.

ACTEX,  a commercial site which sells study information for actuarial exams. The site also has a "job posting" page.

D.W. Simpson & Company : actuarial job searches

John Culver Wooddy Scholarships  John Culver Wooddy Scholarships for Academic Year 2006 - 07 The Actuarial Foundation announces the ninth annual John Culver Wooddy Scholarship. Award winners will receive $2,000 scholarships, established by the estate of John Culver Wooddy, a distinguished actuary who set aside funds to provide scholarships to actuarial students.   Applications must be received by The Actuarial Foundation by Friday, June 23, 2006.

Eligibility:  Undergraduate students who will receive their undergraduate degree by August 31, 2007. Students must rank in the top quartile of their class and have successfully completed one actuarial examination. Students must be recommended by a professor from their school (limit one application per school). Immediate relatives of members of the Board of Trustees of the Actuarial Foundation or committee members, or Boards of affiliated organizations are not eligible to apply.



Careers in Statistics

Brought to you by the American Statistical Association

Information about jobs with the Bureau of Labor Statistics


WU Dept. of Education: Secondary Teaching Certification

Information from the Missouri Department of Education

The National Council of Teachers of Mathematics

Teach For America
        A national corps of outstanding and diverse recent college graduates, all of whom commit two years to teach in under-resourced urban and rural public schools. At least one recent graduate has joined Teach for America.

Math for America


The Peace Corps
"The toughest job you'll ever love"

Occupational Outlook Handbook (Bureau of Labor Statistics)
Use this site to check out "official" information on all sorts or occupations.

 
Looking for a Graduate Program in Mathematics?

Graduate Record Exam Information (GRE's)

Career Center Resources for WUSTL Students


Links to Home Pages of US Math Departments

These links can be very useful to gather preliminary material about math departments around the U.S.  Use them to decide which schools you'd like to contact for more information.

Links to Webpages in Math, Physics, & Engineering at U.S. College and Universities

List of Statistics Department Servers

Graduate School Information
This site has a ton of information about finding a graduate program, surviving in a graduate program, etc.  (Rankings are always "dicey" so take any you find with a grain of salt.)

NSF Graduate Fellowship Information

National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate Fellowships (NDSEGF)

National Physical Science Consortium: Graduate Fellowships for Women & Minorities


Undergraduate Study/Internship Opportunities
 

The Budapest Semesters in Mathematics
   A unique study abroad opportunity for talented math students, coordinated through St. Olaf College.

Math in Moscow   A semester-long program, in English, at the Independent University of MoscowThere are a few NSF-supported fellowships, available through the American Mathematical Society, for undergraduates and graduate students in mathematics or computer science.
Past W.U. participants in the Budapest Semesters and Math in Moscow programs: comments from them and from others.

The Mathematics Advanced Study Semesters (MASS) Program at Penn State


Summer Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU's)
Sites listed here include all the sciences, not just mathematics.
Some of these REU programs may not have been updated from the previous summer. You need to check each one separately.

Summer REU Experiences in Mathematics :another possibly overlapping list.

Some Comments about REU's from SIAM

North Carolina State REU: Modeling and Industrial Applied Mathematics

Summer Undergraduate Applied Mathematics Institute (Carnegie Mellon)  (Also has links to similar summer programs)

IPAM Research in Industrial Projects for Students (RIPS)

Summer REU Program in Discrete Math and Computer Science

Summer Program for Women at George Washington University

Summer Program for Women At Carleton/St. Olaf

"Edge" Program  A summer program for women who have been accepted into a graduate program in the mathematical sciences for the upcoming fall semester.

Summer Undergraduate Mathematical Science Research Institute (SUMSRI)
A program conducted under the guidance of Miami University's (Oxford, Ohio) Department of Mathematics and Statistics. The program seeks talented undergraduate students in the mathematical sciences who are interested in pursuing advanced degrees. Because of the shortage of minorities and women mathematical scientists, it is especially interested in, but not limited to, African Americans and other underrepresented minorities and women.


Internships and Coop Opportunities for Undergraduates (from the AMS)

Semester Internships for Science, Math Students with Dept. of Energy

Summer Internships at the Federal Reserve Board

Internship Opportunities Database from Association for Computing Machinery

Summer Opportunities at the National Security Agency (NSA)

Summer Internships at AT&T Labs

Summer Undergraduate Program at Lincoln Lab (MIT)

Center For Talented Youth (Johns Hopkins)

This summer program for talented youth also hires students as TA's. Some of our undergraduate majors have participated.  Interested in teaching?  Check it out! (See link there to "Employment Opportunities")

A Directory of Life Insurance Company Websites
A good list to browse to see what summer/career opportunities they have to offer.

Internships at Allstate

Internships at Aetna Life and Casualty

Internships at American Family Insurance

 
Math History Sites
 
The MacTutor History of Math Archive
A great site, with lots of topics and biographical information

Links to more than 70 sites with information about the history of mathematics (from The British Society for the History of Mathematics)

Links to many sites of the history of mathematics (from the Math Archives at University of Tennessee)

Links to many sites about history of mathematics (from the Math Forum)

A History of Math Site
From Trinity College, Dublin. Links to lots of other sites.

History of Mathematics Links: Sites Related to Individual Mathematicians

Famous Problems in the History of Mathematics

Galileo
The Galileo Project, a hypertext source of information on the life and work of Galileo Galilei (1564-1642) and the science of his time.

Biographies of Women in Mathematics
From Agnes Scott College

Women in Math
From the University of Oregon

Mathematicians Born or Deceased on This Day
And other historical stuff.
 


 
Math Problems and Contests
 
Contests

           MAA Missouri Mathematics Competition
           The Putnam Exam Site
           Putnam Competition Problems Archive


Problems from

Purdue University
Macalester College
Hamline University
Stetson University
National Science Teachers' Association
Southwest Missouri State University: "Advanced Problem 
Page"
Southwest Missouri State University: "Challenge Problems"

Puzzle Type Problems




)
Math Miscellany


Mathematical Moments
This site, from the AMS is meant to promote understanding of the role math plays in science, nature, teachnology and culture.  The "short versions" of the topics are really at newspaper and high school level, but some of the "related resources" are pretty good.

Perelman and the Poincare Conjecture From the New Yorker:  Perelman  awarded a Fields Medal in 2006 for his work in solving the Poincare Conjecture.  The article isinteresting but take it with a grain of salt; the article has provoked a possible defamation lawsuit on the part of Professor Yau.

The Fields Medals
Information about the Fields Medals (sometimes called the mathematical equivalent of the Nobel Prize)

What's New in Math, from the American Mathematical Society (AMS)

Feature Columns
Math in the Media
Folkproof: A Sampling of Mathematical Folk Humor

Math in the Movies

A Braid of Links
"Your Rough Guide to Mathematics on the Web".  Lots of interesting links!!

John Conway's Game of Life
(See also the 1970 Scientific American article  by Martin Gardner)

On Andrew Wiles' Proof of Fermat's Last Theorem

All Sorts of Things
The math site on Yahoo

Math Fun Facts

Mathematical Quotations Server

Mathematical Constants

The Pi Trivia Game

The Erdos Number Project
Do you know what a person's "Erdos number" is ?

Mathematical Fiction: A Guide
Do you like fiction and mathematics? Looking for a book or a story?  Interested in what our society thinks about mathematicians?  Try this site.

The Science Lab
LInks to math related websites

Code Breaking: A Companion to the NOVA program on breaking the German Enigma messaging machine during WWII, and other stuff about codebreaking

How far is it to ...
Find the distance (as the crow flies) between your favorite places.

Miscellaneous Mathematical Utilities
Includes tools for solving cubic, quartic equations; solving systems of n equations in n unknowns; eigenvalues of matrices up to 6x6; and other things.

All You Want to Know About Primes

Pulchritudinous Primes: Visualizing the Distribution of Prime Numbers

Find The Prime Factors of a Number

Largest Known Primes
Undergraduate Journals
The Harvard College Mathematics Review
The Rose Hulman Institute's Undergraduate Mathematics Journal

The Furman University Electronic Journal of Undergraduate Mathematics

The Morehead Electronic Journal of Applicable Mathematics

The College Mathematics Journal