Edyth May Sliffe Award

The Edyth May Sliffe Award is given annually to (roughly) 20 teachers in the United States by the Mathematical Association of America (MAA). The awards are funded by a bequest from a retired high school mathematics teacher named Edyth May Sliffe, of Emeryville, California. Her purpose was to award high school teachers whose students have done well on the AHSME, now the AMC 12. She felt students who won in math competitions received honors, but their teachers never received any recognition.

Edyth May Sliffe and her Award

(1901 - 1986)

Edyth May Sliffe, a retired teacher who taught at Emery High School, felt that teachers also needed recognition for their contributions toward the students' success. In 1978 she contacted the Governor of the Northern California Section of the MAA, Professor Kenneth Rebman. Kenneth Rebman then told the President of the MAA, Professor Henry Alder, and arranged a meeting with Sliffe. She decided to use her estate to recognize 20 teachers of the highest scoring teams annually. Edyth Sliffe died on December 11, 1986. In accordance with her will, over $250,000 was donated to the MAA. Since 1989, about 20 high school teachers from the top 60 American and Canadian schools have received the award annually. In 1995, the MAA Committee extended the award to middle school teachers. Five teachers are selected from each of the ten American Mathematics Competition Regions.

Nomination of a Teacher

Three students from each of the top 60 highest scoring teams in the AMC 12 are asked to nominate a teacher they felt contributed most to their success.

Award

Award-winning teachers win a cash prize of $350-$750, a letter from the president of the MAA, a certificate signed by the president of MAA, Chair of the Committee on the AMC 12, and the Executive Director of the American Mathematics Competitions. In addition, they get one year free membership in the MAA, and recognition in national and regional professional publications. The award ceremony is arranged by the school administrators. For middle school teachers, the award is $100.

Edyth May Sliffe Awards Committee

  • Steven R Dunbar
  • Harold B Reiter
  • David Hankin
  • Bonnie Leitch
  • Elgin H Johnston
  • Mark E Saul
  • Cheryl M Hawker
  • Gail A Kaplan
gollark: Yes, those item systems use plethora, people aren't stupid.
gollark: Also, we have loads of item systems already:- Artist- Turtlegistics- Wyvern
gollark: How is that *at all* related?!
gollark: It *sounds* simple but is actually several hundred lines of code for some reason.
gollark: Anyway, skynet has two components:- the server - relays messages between clients- the client - connects to the server by websocket, sends/receives messages

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.