Softcover ISBN: | 978-1-4704-7176-7 |
Product Code: | MBK/150 |
List Price: | $39.00 |
MAA Member Price: | $35.10 |
AMS Member Price: | $31.20 |
eBook ISBN: | 978-1-4704-7450-8 |
Product Code: | MBK/150.E |
List Price: | $39.00 |
MAA Member Price: | $35.10 |
AMS Member Price: | $31.20 |
Softcover ISBN: | 978-1-4704-7176-7 |
eBook: ISBN: | 978-1-4704-7450-8 |
Product Code: | MBK/150.B |
List Price: | $78.00 $58.50 |
MAA Member Price: | $70.20 $52.65 |
AMS Member Price: | $62.40 $46.80 |
Softcover ISBN: | 978-1-4704-7176-7 |
Product Code: | MBK/150 |
List Price: | $39.00 |
MAA Member Price: | $35.10 |
AMS Member Price: | $31.20 |
eBook ISBN: | 978-1-4704-7450-8 |
Product Code: | MBK/150.E |
List Price: | $39.00 |
MAA Member Price: | $35.10 |
AMS Member Price: | $31.20 |
Softcover ISBN: | 978-1-4704-7176-7 |
eBook ISBN: | 978-1-4704-7450-8 |
Product Code: | MBK/150.B |
List Price: | $78.00 $58.50 |
MAA Member Price: | $70.20 $52.65 |
AMS Member Price: | $62.40 $46.80 |
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Book Details2023; 189 ppMSC: Primary 00; 01
Aspiring and Inspiring is a collection of essays from successful women and gender minority mathematicians on what it takes to build a career in mathematics. The individual essays are intended to advise, encourage, and inspire mathematicians throughout different stages of their careers. Themes emerge as these prominent individuals describe how they managed to persist and rise to positions of leadership in a field which can still be forbidding to many. We read, repeatedly, that individual mentorship matters, that networks of support can be critical, and that finding fulfillment can mean formulating one's own definition of success. Those who aspire to leadership in the field will find much useful advice here.
The cumulative power of the collection carries a strong impact. The glass ceiling is very real in mathematics and is the result of cultural and sociological factors at work in our community. The book makes clear that we won't achieve equality of opportunity merely by exhorting those who are often excluded to change their behaviors and their goals. The need for systemic cultural change is vividly, at times painfully, evident in these stories. As Dr. Erica Graham says in her powerful and moving essay, we need “a different kind of academy”, and we'll only get it by working for it. We can start by reading this book and recognizing the kind of academy we currently have.
ReadershipGraduate students and researchers interested in professional advancement.
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Table of Contents
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Chapters
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A path to success: Enabled by guardians, connectors and taking adventurous steps
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Trust yourself!
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The fight within
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Intersectionality as impetus and impediment
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Find your passion, get organized & cultivate support systems
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Tenure: The rules of the game
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Make yourself valuable
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It’s a wonderful life!–Reflections on the career of a mathematician
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Success is a relative term
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Multifaceting: Shattering your own glass ceiling
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Positioning yourself to crack the glass ceiling
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I am not your typical role model (or do not follow my steps)
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How I became a department head
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Around the glass ceiling
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The professional advancement of women mathematicians
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Branch cuts: Writing, editing, and ramifield complexities
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Reach as you climb: Searching for purpose and meaning in academia
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Additional Material
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Reviews
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I recommend that you read "Aspiring and Inspiring: Tenure and Leadership in Academic Mathematics" to see how it could affect your future.
I, personally, have a new definition of success. Become an ally. Become a mentor. Sow the seeds of change. Work to reform the academy.
Deanna Haunsperger, Notices of the AMS
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RequestsReview Copy – for publishers of book reviewsAccessibility – to request an alternate format of an AMS title
- Book Details
- Table of Contents
- Additional Material
- Reviews
- Requests
Aspiring and Inspiring is a collection of essays from successful women and gender minority mathematicians on what it takes to build a career in mathematics. The individual essays are intended to advise, encourage, and inspire mathematicians throughout different stages of their careers. Themes emerge as these prominent individuals describe how they managed to persist and rise to positions of leadership in a field which can still be forbidding to many. We read, repeatedly, that individual mentorship matters, that networks of support can be critical, and that finding fulfillment can mean formulating one's own definition of success. Those who aspire to leadership in the field will find much useful advice here.
The cumulative power of the collection carries a strong impact. The glass ceiling is very real in mathematics and is the result of cultural and sociological factors at work in our community. The book makes clear that we won't achieve equality of opportunity merely by exhorting those who are often excluded to change their behaviors and their goals. The need for systemic cultural change is vividly, at times painfully, evident in these stories. As Dr. Erica Graham says in her powerful and moving essay, we need “a different kind of academy”, and we'll only get it by working for it. We can start by reading this book and recognizing the kind of academy we currently have.
Graduate students and researchers interested in professional advancement.
-
Chapters
-
A path to success: Enabled by guardians, connectors and taking adventurous steps
-
Trust yourself!
-
The fight within
-
Intersectionality as impetus and impediment
-
Find your passion, get organized & cultivate support systems
-
Tenure: The rules of the game
-
Make yourself valuable
-
It’s a wonderful life!–Reflections on the career of a mathematician
-
Success is a relative term
-
Multifaceting: Shattering your own glass ceiling
-
Positioning yourself to crack the glass ceiling
-
I am not your typical role model (or do not follow my steps)
-
How I became a department head
-
Around the glass ceiling
-
The professional advancement of women mathematicians
-
Branch cuts: Writing, editing, and ramifield complexities
-
Reach as you climb: Searching for purpose and meaning in academia
-
I recommend that you read "Aspiring and Inspiring: Tenure and Leadership in Academic Mathematics" to see how it could affect your future.
I, personally, have a new definition of success. Become an ally. Become a mentor. Sow the seeds of change. Work to reform the academy.
Deanna Haunsperger, Notices of the AMS