The Institute provides an opportunity for bright and gifted pre-college
students to interact with university faculty and each other, to take some
challenging math classes that earn college credit, and have fun in an academic
atmosphere. Check with the Institute PHILOSOPHY.
Students take two 4-credit COURSES in
mathematics
or statistics taught by full-time doctoral-holding FACULTY
.
The Summer Mathematics Institute at Oakland University is FREE
to all participants.
The Summer Mathematics Institute at Oakland University is a day camp. Check
with the SCHEDULE.
Completed applications will be given full consideration if received by May
15, 2000. Refer to ADMISSION policy and APPLICATION MATERIALS .
Further information is available from:
Photographs of the camp are now avaliable. You can download the executable file (for windows only) here or go to the webpage to look at them.
The Institute DIRECTOR :
Dr. Marc Lipman
is Professor and Chair of the Department
of Mathematics and Statistics at Oakland
University.
He graduated from Lake Forest College
in 1971 with a double major in Mathematics and Physics.
He received his Ph.D. from Dartmouth College in 1976. From 1976 to 1989,
he was a faculty member at Indiana University-Purdue University at
Fort Wayne. During this time, he spent 1980-1981 at the Naval Research
Laboratoty in Washington, D.C..
From 1989 to 1997, he was the scientific officer in charge of
the four million dollar
Discrete Mathematics program at the Office of Naval Research. His
research
interests include interconnection networks, communication network
topology
and sphere-of-influence graphs. He has authored and coauthored about 50
research papers.
Among other things, he's taught at STAR, the residential
summer camp for bright and gifted students at Purdue University.
The Institute ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR :
Dr. Eddie Cheng
is Assistant Professor in the Department
of Mathematics and Statistics at Oakland
University. He joined the faculty of Oakland
University in 1997. He received his B.Sc. (Hons.) from
Memorial University of Newfoundland (Canada) in 1988. During the summer
of 1998, he worked as a research assistant in the Department of National
Defence in British Columbia. For his graduate
studies, he received his M.Math. in 1990 and Ph.D. in Combinatorics and
Optimization from the University of Waterloo (Canada) in 1995.
From 1995 to 1997, he was a Natural Sciences and Engineering Research
Council of Canada Postdoctoral Fellow and part-time lecturer in
the George R. Brown School of Engineering at Rice University. His
research
interests include combinatorial optimization, integer programming and
network analysis.