Karen Marrongelle

Karen Ann Marrongelle is an American mathematics educator specializing in collaborative learning in undergraduate-level mathematics education.[1] Formerly the dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences at Portland State University, in 2018 she became the head of the Directorate for Education and Human Resources at the National Science Foundation.[2][3]

Education and career

Marrongelle attended Allentown Central Catholic High School in Allentown, Pennsylvania. She is a 1995 graduate of Albright College,[4] where she majored in mathematics and also served on the executive board of Albright's radio station, WXAC.[5] After earning a master's degree in mathematics at Lehigh University in 1997,[6] she completed her doctorate in mathematics education at the University of New Hampshire.[3] Her dissertation was Physics experiences and calculus: How students use physics to construct meaningful conceptualizations of calculus concepts in an interdisciplinary calculus/physics course.[7]

In 2001, Marrongelle became a faculty member in the department of mathematics and statistics at Portland State University. She took a leave from Portland State to work at the National Science Foundation from 2007 to 2009. At Portland State, she was Assistant Vice Chancellor for Academic Standards, Vice Chancellor for Academic Strategies, and Interim Dean of Liberal Arts and Sciences, before being given the deanship on a permanent basis in 2015.[2][3] As dean, she led a proposal to eliminate Portland State's language programs in Ancient Greek, Swahili, Korean and Vietnamese.[8]

Publications and service

With Ping Li, Marrongelle is the author of the book Having Success with NSF: A Practical Guide (Wiley, 2013).

In 2015, Marongelle became one of the three founding editors-in-chief of the Springer mathematics education journal International Journal of Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education, a role she continued to hold until 2019.[9]

gollark: It even has autoreconnect.
gollark: It does some websockety things.
gollark: Well, I can copypaste the SPUDNET code out of potatOS.
gollark: Also, in-person teaching does also seemingly generally work somewhat better, and not being able to do much in-person stuff also means you cannot really, say, ask professors questions directly, use... physical objects and stuff there... or socialize with people/do many activities, which is apparently a university thing™.
gollark: ...

References

  1. Pesznecker, Sue (May 12, 2006), "Old math, new ideas", PSU Vanguard
  2. Rojas, Cristina (August 21, 2018), Dean Karen Marrongelle to take job with National Science Foundation, Portland State University, retrieved 2019-08-23
  3. NSF selects Karen Marrongelle to head its Education and Human Resources Directorate: Portland State University dean brings strategic vision, focus on broadening participation to new role, National Science Foundation, August 21, 2018, retrieved 2019-08-23
  4. "Area residents receive bachelor's degrees", The Morning Call, August 3, 1995
  5. "Allentown student named to board of radio station", The Morning Call, July 29, 1993
  6. "Ex-Governor tells Lehigh grads to relish life", The Morning Call, June 2, 1997
  7. WorldCat catalog entry for dissertation, retrieved 2019-08-23
  8. Ford, Savanna (November 7, 2018), "Eliminating world languages", PSU Vanguard
  9. Marrongelle, Karen; Rasmussen, Chris; Thomas, Michael O. J. (February 2019), "Editorial", International Journal of Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education, 5 (1): 1–2, doi:10.1007/s40753-019-00087-4
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