Kathleen Kavanagh

Kathleen Rose Kavanagh (publishes as Kathleen R. Fowler) is an American applied mathematician whose research involves simulation-based engineering,[1] particular for problems involving air quality, water quality, and sustainable irrigation.[2] She is a professor of mathematics at Clarkson University,[1] and a director of the New York State Education IMPETUS for Career Success providing science enrichment for middle and high school students in three counties of New York State.[3]

Education and career

Kavanagh was a graduate of the State University of New York at Plattsburgh. She completed her Ph.D. at North Carolina State University in 2003; her dissertation, Nonsmooth Nonlinearities in Applications in Hydrology, was supervised by Carl T. (Tim) Kelley.[4] She has been a faculty member in the mathematics department of Clarkson University since 2003,[3] and was promoted to full professor in 2015.[1]

Recognition

Kavanagh was a 2010 winner of the Henry L. Alder Award for Distinguished Teaching by a Beginning College or University Mathematics Faculty Member of the Mathematical Association of America.[5] In 2018, Clarkson University gave her their Distinguished Teaching Award.[3]

gollark: It should run perfectly fine on a raspberry pi, if you wanted to do that, so it's not particularly *hard* to keep it going.
gollark: I imagine I'd probably not want to not run it, but it's MIT-licensed, so basically do whatever as long as the copyright notice is kept.
gollark: As in, do that on the client.
gollark: You can configure skynet to use your server by doing `skynet.server = 'wss://your.server/connect/' after importing it but before connecting.
gollark: Ah, easy - `git clone` the repository, `npm install`, `node src/index.js`.

References

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