Students gain exposure to new math concepts from visiting Boston professor
A Boston University professor whose journey into mathematics started at the University of Guam was back at UOG over the holiday break to instill some of that same mentorship into the next generation of Guam students.
Jennifer Balakrishnan grew up in Guam, and as a high school student, she attended
some classes at UOG, where her father, Narayana Balakrishnan, was a chemistry professor
for many years.
鈥淭he faculty were so generous with their time,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 remember Dr. Arlo Schurle had all these books and would lend them me. I would read them and ask him questions. I know he must have had an enormous teaching load 鈥 but he spent all this time talking to this high school student. [鈥 So if I can do even just a little bit of that while I鈥檓 here, it would be great.鈥
Her research at Boston University involves computational tools for algorithms in number theory, and as part of her National Science Foundation鈥揻unded research grant, Balakrishnan built in a set of workshops at UOG. She plans to offer three workshops, and the first one 鈥 Computational Number Theory: Computing Databases of Elliptic Curves 鈥 took place the week of Dec. 19.
鈥淭his was the community that helped me get my start in math, so I'm so happy to come back and be able to do this,鈥 she said.
The specialized topics of number theory and computational number theory complement the mathematics courses at UOG. Her workshops are meant to teach students new topics and new mathematical, but also computational, tools like Python, SageMath, and Magma.
Sydney Espinueva, a senior secondary education math major, signed up for the workshop to broaden her exposure in her field and said that coding is something she鈥檇 like to use in her future classroom.
鈥淚t鈥檚 new territory for me, but I do like some of the things I鈥檓 able to understand, like the number theory, and having that knowledge,鈥 he said.
Balakrishnan said programming skills are highly useful and translatable to other areas of life; for instance, number theory is highly relevant for cryptography, which makes it possible to do online banking and use debit cards.
鈥淚t鈥檚 been great to watch the students take this new set of topics and go for it,鈥 she said, adding, 鈥淚t would be amazing if any of them came to Boston for a Ph.D. [鈥 The students here have enormous potential.鈥