Sue Singer

Sue Singer is a British mathematics educator. She is the former headmistress of Guildford High School, a girls' school in Surrey, the former president of the Girls' Schools Association, and the former president of the Mathematical Association.

Career

Singer married and had children before studying at the university level, and began her university studies in 1971 with a mathematics course at the Open University, in its first class of students. After completing a degree through the Open University, and a Postgraduate Certificate in Education at Garnett College, she became a mathematics teacher at St Paul's Girls' School, and eventually head of mathematics there, before becoming headmistress at Guildford. She retired from Guildford in 2002[1] and later became a recruitment consultant, leading the schools practice at Saxton Bampfylde.[2]

Association leadership

As president of the Girls' Schools Association, she led calls to replace the General Certificate of Secondary Education examination system by teacher evaluations.[3][4]

Singer was president of the Mathematical Association for the 2005–2006 term.[5] She is an avid sailor, and her presidential address to the Mathematical Association included mathematical problems associated with sailing as examples of the applicability of mathematics to everyday life, a topic that she felt should be emphasized in mathematical teaching.[6]

gollark: 4703 somehow *does things* just because the law says it can, even though the law is just a human concept and only affects what humans do.
gollark: Really, one of the main things which makes (some) SCPs weird is that they take convenient abstractions/concepts and turn them into immutable physical laws, while our real universe just runs on... well, physics. 173 is affected by line of sight, even though this is just a thing humans do to reason about... looking at things. 005 is just a magic item which unlocks things, 048 is just a label we assign to things which somehow affects them.
gollark: Alternatively, the machine breaks, if it prefers simple changes - so I guess make it STUPIDLY redundant.
gollark: * didn't happen
gollark: Idea: what if you make a machine which will automatically open the box if an XK-class scenario occurs/is imminent?]

References

  1. Singer, Sue, "President's Report", Annual Report 2005–2006 (PDF), Mathematical Association, pp. 1–2
  2. "Guide to executive recruitment agencies and head-hunters in the UK and Ireland (p 83)" (PDF). Retrieved 13 October 2018.
  3. MacLeod, Donald (19 November 2001), "Headteacher calls for scrapping of GCSE exams", The Guardian
  4. Early GCSEs 'not only answer', BBC News, 19 November 2001
  5. Presidents of the Association, Mathematical Association, retrieved 2018-10-06
  6. Singer, Sue (November 2006), "Sailing through Mathematics", The Mathematical Gazette, 90 (519): 385–397, JSTOR 40378185
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.