When Angela Siegel was young, she and her dad came upon his Grade 4 math textbook at her grandmother鈥檚 house in Saint Paul, Minnesota. Together with her parents, they鈥檇 puzzle over math problems, their heads bent over the well-used textbook searching for answers.
鈥淚 still remember the three of us working through these problems鈥攁nd I was pretty little,鈥 recalls Ms. Siegel, who is graduating with a PhD in mathematics. 鈥淭he older I got, the more interesting it became.鈥
From early on, she equated mathematics with fun. She only wishes more people would see it that way instead of being intimidated with the subject.
Mathematics is such a passion that she heads Math Circles, an outreach program for high school students. She coordinated the program on a volunteer basis and 鈥渂egged for pizza money from the Faculty of Science鈥 for five years until the Math Circles team was successful in applying for funding from the Imperial Oil Foundation. The gigantic cheque for $400,000 has a place of pride in her office in the Chase Building; it -allowed them to hire a paid coordinator and expand the program鈥檚 reach to communities throughout the province. Math Circles also continues to welcome high school students to campus every month for hands-on math experimentation.
鈥淲e鈥檙e looking for active participation from students,鈥 says Ms. Siegel, who has visited all ends of the province with Math Circles, from Freeport to Neil鈥檚 Harbour. 鈥淲e get them up and involved. We get them to be the graph, to demonstrate the order of the polynomial. The big thing is to get them doing something and to make it relevant.鈥
Alongside Math Circles, she鈥檚 been working away at her PhD for a few years now鈥攈er expertise is game theory鈥攁nd teaching in the department. At the same time, she and her oceanographer husband Eric Siegel became parents. They have two children, Anneka, 5, and Dorian, 3.
It鈥檚 a busy, full life but wonderfully, delightfully fun. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not really work when you鈥檙e having a good time,鈥 she says, smiling. 鈥淗ow can you not have fun doing all this?鈥
Having fun with math
Part of a series of stories profiling graduating students
Marilyn Smulders - May 24, 2011