Alia Sabur

Alia Sabur (born February 22, 1989) is an American materials scientist. She holds the record for being the world's youngest professor.[1]

Alia Sabur
Born (1989-02-22) February 22, 1989
NationalityAmerican
Alma materStony Brook University
Drexel University
Scientific career
FieldsMaterials science
InstitutionsKonkuk University

Early life and education

Sabur was born in New York City, New York. Her mother, Julie Sabur (born Kessler), worked as a reporter for News12 Long Island until 1995.[2] She married Mohammed Sabur, a Pakistan native, in 1980.[2] Alia, born on February 22, 1989, showed early signs of giftedness. She tested "off the IQ scale," according to an educator who tested her as a first-grader.[2] As a fourth-grader, she left public school and was admitted to Stony Brook University at the age of 10, later graduating summa cum laude at 14. She also received a black belt in Tae Kwon Do at the age of 9.[3]

After Stony Brook, Sabur attended Drexel University, where she received her M.S. in 2006. Alia was recipient of the 2007 Dean fellowship from Drexel University.[4] In 2007 she took a temporary position at Southern University in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina.[5]

Mathematics career

On 19 February 2008, at 18 years of age (3 days before her 19th birthday), she was appointed to the position of International Professor as Research Liaison with Stony Brook University by the Dept. of Advanced Technology Fusion at Konkuk University in Seoul, South Korea. The position was a temporary, one-year contract which she chose not to renew.[6][7] The Guinness Book of World Records named Sabur the World's Youngest Professor, replacing Colin Maclaurin’s mathematics Professorship at the University of Aberdeen at the age of 19.

She began her position at the Department of Advanced Technology Fusion at Konkuk University in June 2008 and returned to her hometown of New York early 2009, without renewing her contract.[5][7][8]

Deepwater Horizon oil spill

In June 2010 Sabur appeared on CNN and Fox News' Hannity to illustrate her idea, which BP considered as an option to help alleviate the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.[9][10][11]

Graduate school controversy

In 2008, Sabur filed a civil suit against Drexel University, claiming that the university engaged in fraud and defamation regarding Sabur's pursuit of a doctoral degree. In the suit, Sabur charges that Yury Gogotsi, her former Ph.D. advisor, improperly used her research to apply for grants, and deliberately obstructed her degree. Trial proceedings began on August 9, 2010.

"But that was when I grew disillusioned with the science world. I saw bad conduct and realised that some professors weren’t motivated by a love of science. I fell out with the adviser who was supervising my PhD. I sued Drexel University in a civil lawsuit and the case has now gone into private, binding arbitration. I believe my adviser applied for grants and patents using my ideas, and took credit for them. He denies this and has accused me of stealing his work. Even though the university has cleared me of plagiarism it has still refused to award me my PhD.", says Financial Times article.[6]

This is the second lawsuit involving the Sabur family. In the previous one Alia Sabur's parents brought suit on behalf of their daughter, alleging that the NorthportEast Northport board of education, its members, and the school district failed to provide their daughter with appropriate educational services in violation of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.[12] Six of the seven counts were dismissed.

gollark: Er, you probably want that, yes.
gollark: I have no idea about that specific API, I'll check.
gollark: Modern password hashing functions are designed to be slow to run (and to be fastest on general-purpose computing hardware and not ASICs) to mitigate this sort of thing.
gollark: If you do *not* use that, then people can store a bunch of precalculated mappings from hashes to original passwords (rainbow tables, yes) and work out the original.
gollark: That's why salts are recommended (they're a bit of extra data you store along with the password and feed to the hash function when hashing it in the first place and comparing passwords with the hash).

References

  1. Youngest Professor - Guinness World Records
  2. Newsday Long Island - March 9, 1999 - Real Genius: 10-year-old Alia Sabur of Northport tests 'off the IQ scale'
  3. Winerip, Michael (2003-01-22). "Reading at 8 Months? That Was Just the Start". The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-05-08.
  4. "MSE Well Represented at Honors Day Ceremony". Archived from the original on 2013-01-19. Retrieved 2013-05-23.
  5. McNeill, David (2008-05-01). "University appoints world's youngest professor". The Independent.
  6. Duguid, Sarah (2010-10-01). "First Person: Alia Sabur". Financial Times Magazine. Archived from the original on 7 October 2010. Retrieved 2010-10-14.
  7. Ahn Hai-ri; Lee Jong-chan; Choe Sun-uk; Lee Jeong-bong (2009-10-24). "Critics denounce expat college hires". Joongang Daily. Retrieved 2009-11-12.
  8. Considine, Bob (2008-04-24). "World's youngest professor can't legally drink". MSNBC. Archived from the original on 25 April 2008. Retrieved 2008-04-25.
  9. "21-year-old's oil leak idea caught BP's eye". American Morning. June 7, 2010. CNN. Transcript.
  10. Rosenberg, Rebecca (2010-06-04). "LI brainiac offers oil giant a slick fix". New York Post. Retrieved 2010-06-08.
  11. "Three Ways to Fix the Gulf Oil Disaster". Hannity. June 7, 2010. Fox News. Transcript.
  12. "Sabur vs Brosnan, US District Court for the Eastern District of New York, 203 F. Supp. 2d 292 (2002)". NY.Findacase. Retrieved 2011-06-28.

Further reading

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