Karen Rhea

Karen Rhea is an American mathematics educator, a Collegiate Lecturer Emerita in the mathematics department of the University of Michigan.[1] Before joining the University of Michigan faculty, she was on the faculty at the University of Southern Mississippi.[2]

Contributions

With Andrew M. Gleason, Deborah Hughes Hallett, and others Rhea is a coauthor of several calculus textbooks produced by the Harvard Calculus Consortium.[3] She is also a proponent of flipped classrooms for calculus instruction.[4]

Recognition

In 1998, the Louisiana–Mississippi section of the Mathematical Association of America gave Rhea their Award for Distinguished College or University Teaching of Mathematics. In 2011, Rhea won the Deborah and Franklin Haimo Awards for Distinguished College or University Teaching of Mathematics, the highest teaching award of the Mathematical Association of America. The award citation credited her work at Michigan directing the annual 4500-student calculus sequence and preparing instructors for the sequence, as well as her work in national-level education in the Harvard Calculus Consortium.[2]

In honor of Rhea's teaching, University of Michigan's department of mathematics offers an annual award, the Karen Rhea Excellence in Teaching Award, for outstanding performance by its graduate student instructors.[5]

gollark: Ah, there's one bit of code which actually does (for some reason?) do mid-list removals!
gollark: Did this person REALLY reimplement `join`, but wrong?
gollark: Wow, this code is awful in almost every way.
gollark: I'm going to see if it gets faster if I just swap all doubly linked lists for seqs.
gollark: Summon eldritch horrors?

References

  1. Karen Rhea, University of Michigan Mathematics, retrieved 2019-10-02
  2. "MAA Prizes Presented in New Orleans" (PDF), Notices of the American Mathematical Society, 58 (5): 708–710, May 2011
  3. "Rhea, Karen", WorldCat Identities, retrieved 2019-11-02
  4. Berrett, Dan (February 19, 2012), "How 'Flipping' the Classroom Can Improve the Traditional Lecture", The Chronicle of Higher Education
  5. Department Teaching Awards, University of Michigan Mathematics, retrieved 2019-10-02
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.