Playing the Numbers: A BU summer program builds a community of young math lovers
By Bari Walsh
BU Arts & Sciences, Spring 2003
 |
|
| |
Professor Glenn
Stevens, director of PROMYS |
 |
 |
Summer: long days at the beach, cold lemonade,
thick novels—and number theory. At
least, that’s what summer means to
Professor Glenn Stevens (possibly excepting
the beach, the lemonade, and the novels)
and the high school students enrolled in
BU’s Program in Mathematics for Young
Scientists, known as PROMYS.
Stevens and
his colleagues in the CAS Department of
Mathematics and Statistics have run
PROMYS (pronounced “promise”)
every summer since 1989, inviting motivated
math lovers to the BU campus for six weeks
and immersing them in creative, rigorous
explorations of number theory, advanced
algebra and
geometry, and other forms of
mathematical analysis. Through lectures,
group work, and seminars, these students,
who already possess a prodigious amount
of raw talent, gain a sophisticated understanding
of mathematical concepts. They go far beyond
where their high school math curricula
generally take them.
“All too often,” Stevens says, “students
experience mathematics as facts to be memorized
and algorithms to be mastered. They practice
routine drills and follow rigid sets of
rules and techniques to get the ‘right
answers’ to problems they often find
uninteresting. They rarely experience the
delight of exploring new ideas within the
realm of mathematics.” Nurturing
that delight is what PROMYS is all about.
Stevens
recalls the wonder of his own journey from
rigid, right-or-wrong math to creative, “beautiful” math:
it began during a summer high school program
that he enrolled in, run by the late Professor
Arnold Ross at Ohio State University. His
Mathematics colleagues at BU, professors
David Fried and Steve Rosenberg, also went
through Ross’s program and now participate
in PROMYS, which draws inspiration and
methodology from its forerunner.
|
|
 |
| Yes, but can
you prove it? |
|
 |
|
Many of
the students who enroll in the program
have never been challenged by math
before; it has come so easily to them that
boredom has set in, and a long struggle
with a problem set is an unfamiliar sensation.
The intensity of the learning experience
at PROMYS can be almost frightening for
those students.
Says Stevens, “They’re
very, very bright. They’re accustomed
to the idea that they’re the brightest
around. They’re very good at math,
and many of them have developed an interest
in it because they’re so good at
it. We want to give them reasons for liking
mathematics that are a little deeper than
that.”
When first-time students arrive
on campus, they become part of a community
that includes
returning students, counselors (who are
college-aged former PROMYS students), mentors
(professional mathematicians), and professors.
Living in Warren Towers, in close proximity
to older students and counselors, talented
newcomers see, often for the first time,
problems that they don’t understand,
and people who are more accomplished than
they. It’s a situation that Stevens
relishes: he knows he isn’t doing
his job if he doesn’t challenge students
beyond their comfort levels. And part of
what makes PROMYS work is the web of resources
that surrounds each student; fellow students,
older students, and counselors are all
available to help out on the tough problem
sets Stevens assigns during each morning’s
class. (PROMYS offers advanced seminars
to keep the program challenging for returning
students and counselors.)
 |
|
| |
Transcendental? Sure
looks that way. |
 |
 |
Lorelei Larking,
an MIT sophomore who is a four-year veteran
of PROMYS, is returning
this summer as a counselor. She says she “wasn’t
that into math” in high school. She
was bored by the classes she took, until
an encouraging teacher gave her extra problems
and pushed her to apply to PROMYS. She
remembers the initial jolt of that first
summer. “It was sometimes intimidating
at first. These are really smart kids.
But it’s cool to be with people you
fit in with. To sit around and crack stupid
math jokes. It’s why I thought I’d
enjoy going to MIT. It’s great to
be with people who think along the same
lines, who see the beauty in math—not
to sound too dorky.”
As a counselor,
she is assigned several students to look
after; she grades their
problem sets and helps them find their
stride. She describes herself as “not
kind” when it comes to grading. “My
favorite line is something my favorite
counselor used to say: ‘Can you prove
it?’” But the camaraderie of
working closely with her students has aided
her own work, she says. “It’s
been helpful to see how students figure
things out. The things they think of first
aren’t always the things I’d
think of first.”
Sarah Eggleston,
a junior preparing to graduate early from
Cambridge Rindge and
Latin School in Cambridge, Massachusetts,
has two PROMYS years under her belt. She
found the level of knowledge among her
peers “kind of discouraging at first.
I felt like, Oh my God, I’ll never
be able to do this. But after I got into
it, and made friends, I got to work on
things with other people. You learn that
getting anything done on the problem sets
is better than getting nothing done. You
learn to look at what you’ve done
instead of what you haven’t—because
there’s so much more of what you
haven’t!”
She describes the
work as “intense.” She’d
been excited about the math she encountered
in high school, but her PROMYS experience
was “totally different. There’s
math, and then there’s PROMYS math,
where you can’t just open a book
and look up the answer. You can’t
parrot something back. PROMYS wants you
to explore on your own.”
|
|
 |
| A full house for a morning
of math |
|
 |
|
Some students
don’t take to the challenge
with such enthusiasm, at least not right
away. “Occasionally someone will
come to me at the end of a summer and say, ‘Wow
that was so much work, and it was so discouraging
that I couldn’t solve all those problems,
and I don’t ever want to do this
again,’” Stevens says. “And
that’s fine—better they know
now if they’d rather do something
else. However, very often they go back
to their schools and get back to a normal
environment where the challenges and the
intrigue in the material they’re
studying are no longer there. There’s
no mystery. And they get bored. And they
remember. Then I’ll get a letter
saying, ‘You know, Professor Stevens,
actually, that was a really wonderful experience,
and I really want to come back again, and
would you please let me come back this
summer?’”
A remarkable number
of students do come back. And Stevens remains
in touch with
many former students, who often go on to
careers in leading technology companies,
on Wall Street, or at impressive academic
institutions. Sometimes an encounter with
a student he hasn’t kept in touch
with is even more gratifying. “I
actually have people come by my office
and say, ‘Hello Professor Stevens,
do you remember me? I’m now a faculty
member at SUNY,’ for example. We
know them from so long ago when they were
so young, and we watch them grow up. It’s
pretty amazing.”
For Teachers, Too
Professor Stevens began PROMYS for Teachers
(PFT) in 1991 to foster a spirit of open-ended
exploration in high school math classes
and to revitalize math curricula across
Massachusetts.
PFT is an intense two-summer,
six-week immersion in number theory and deep
mathematics. Twenty
teachers are accepted to the program each
summer. Instruction continues during the
academic year, in the form of five full-day
workshops designed by the Education Development
Center in Newton, Massachusetts, and the
Boston University Department of Mathematics
and Statistics. The aim is to ensure that
teachers who attend the summer program will
transport the PROMYS “culture” of
exploration and creativity back to their
high schools. The workshops give teachers
strategies for applying the mathematics they
learned and developing age-appropriate research
experiences for their students.
Teachers earn
graduate credits and a stipend for each summer
of participation; PROMYS
recently received a $50,000 grant from the
Massachusetts Board of Higher Education to
fund these stipends, with money made available
under the federal No Child Left Behind Act
of 2001. So far, teachers from thirty-three
Massachusetts high schools have taken part,
and the program has earned high marks from
school professionals across the state. As
Edward Joyce, senior program director for
the Boston Public Schools, notes, “We
are at the beginning of a new generation
of math teachers in Boston. It is so important
that we have exciting and relevant professional
development for these teachers.”
The original article is available at http://www.bu.edu/alumni/cas/magazine/archives/2003/spring/numbers/ (opens in a new window).
|