938
edits
Willipedia is now back online as of 5/5/2019 |
It has been several years since Willipedia closed. Please help get it updated! |
Go to the Willipedia 2.0 Project to learn more. |
Changes
The math library is awesome.
[[Image:Math Library at Night.jpg|right|thumb|Math Library at Night]]
The Dana-Towne Library, better known as the Math Library, is a popular place for [[Mathematics|Math]] majors and others to study. The lower floor is surrounded by math department faculty, and the upper floor, which forms a ring around a central open space, is surrounded by psychology department offices.
When asked what has made the Williams math department so successful, some math professors cite the configuration of their space. Students can easily collaborate in the math library, and their professors' offices are right there if they have a question since their office doors are always open. However, there are book stacks between the table area and the offices, to separate the professors and the students so that they're not staring at each other, because that could get awkward.
The math department has been very successful in the following ways:
*Fully 10% of graduating students are math majors, which is well above the national average of just over 1%
*Four of the math faculty ([http://www.williams.edu/Mathematics/cadams/ Colin Adams], [http://www.williams.edu/Mathematics/eburger/ Ed Burger], [http://www.williams.edu/Mathematics/tgarrity/ Tom Garrity], and [http://www.williams.edu/Mathematics/fmorgan/ Frank Morgan]) have won an Excellence in Teaching award. No other college or university has more than two winners, and those that have two are much larger departments than Williams.
The Dana-Towne Library, better known as the Math Library, is a popular place for [[Mathematics|Math]] majors and others to study. The lower floor is surrounded by math department faculty, and the upper floor, which forms a ring around a central open space, is surrounded by psychology department offices.
When asked what has made the Williams math department so successful, some math professors cite the configuration of their space. Students can easily collaborate in the math library, and their professors' offices are right there if they have a question since their office doors are always open. However, there are book stacks between the table area and the offices, to separate the professors and the students so that they're not staring at each other, because that could get awkward.
The math department has been very successful in the following ways:
*Fully 10% of graduating students are math majors, which is well above the national average of just over 1%
*Four of the math faculty ([http://www.williams.edu/Mathematics/cadams/ Colin Adams], [http://www.williams.edu/Mathematics/eburger/ Ed Burger], [http://www.williams.edu/Mathematics/tgarrity/ Tom Garrity], and [http://www.williams.edu/Mathematics/fmorgan/ Frank Morgan]) have won an Excellence in Teaching award. No other college or university has more than two winners, and those that have two are much larger departments than Williams.