Directed Reading Program
The Directed Reading Program (DRP) gives undergraduates the opportunity to:- work one-on-one with a graduate mentor for the semester,
- learn an area of mathematics not covered in any course, and
- gain valuable presentation skills.
Requirements
The DRP pairs undergraduate students with graduate-student mentors for an independent reading course. Undergraduate participants are expected to:- meet once per week with the graduate-student mentor,
- work independently for approximately three hours between meetings, and
- give a 10- to 15-minute talk on their project at the end of the semester.
Testimonials from participants
- "One-on-one communication with my mentor was most valuable to me, since that level of engagement is usually not possible in mathematics courses where there are many other students."
- "I would love for this to become a required course for Math Majors, it was really helpful and I enjoyed the one-on-one aspect of it."
DRP Activities - Spring 2024
- Kick-off event (August 31 at 5:15 [grad students] and 5:30 [undergrad students] in Blocker 306)
- A presentation on "How (not) to give a talk", plus a tutorial on Overleaf and Beamer (Tuesday, April 2 at 5:00pm in Blocker 628)
- Final presentations by undergraduate participants, DAY ONE (Monday, April 29 at 5:00 pm)
- Final presentations by undergraduate participants, DAY TWO (Tuesday, April 30 at 5:00 pm)
- Emily Baker - Algebraic Geometry (mentor: Erik Davis)
- Anders Bahrami - An Introduction to Qualitative Theory of ODEs (mentor: Alexandros Kazantzidis)
- Lucian Chauvin - Turing Machines and Undecidability (mentor: Ben Warren)
- William Echols - Clifford Algebra for Graph Theory (mentor: Alex Weygandt)
- Tom Haque - Monte Carlo Integration (mentor: Jose Lopez Garcia)
- Preston Kouyoumdjian - Density of primes dividing an infinite sequence (mentor: Santiago Radi)
- Arthur Mayo III - Topological reduction in chemical reaction networks (mentor: Jordy Lopez Garcia)
- Rock Mundada - Understanding Random Walks in Finance (mentor: Angelique Morvant)
- Ananya Nambiar - The Mathematical Framework of Relativity (mentor: Seth Hoisington)
- Lance Preston and Christofer Hardcastle - Chemical Reaction Networks and the Deficiency Zero Theorem (mentor: Wyatt Smith)
- Mckinley Xie - A Gentle Introduction to Algebraic Geometry (mentor: Jing Ye)
To participate in Fall 2024, see below.
How to participate (undergraduates) - Fall 2024
We encourage applications from any undergraduate who:- will be a sophomore, junior, or senior during the semester of the program,
- has completed a year-long calculus sequence, and
- is interested in learning interesting mathematics outside of the classroom.
[NEW] we are offering (in addition to the usual DRP experience) a number of interdisciplinary projects that you can work on in teams of two (with a grad student mentor).
- A list of project ideas is here.
- If you have any questions about these projects, don't hesitate to contact Prof. Matthias Maier (maier@tamu.edu).
We warmly welcome applications from first-generation college students, women, and members of underrepresented groups in STEM.
To apply to participate in Fall 2024:
- complete the application for undergraduate students (Deadline: Monday, March 25), and
- register for Math 285 (Directed Studies), section 501, for 1 credit-hour.
How to participate (graduate students) - Fall 2024
To be announced (by email)!DRP Activities - Prior Semesters
- See here
Organizers
The DRP is organized by Jordy Lopez and Angelique Morvant, with faculty mentor Anne Shiu.Please reach out to any of us with questions!
Resources
Project ideas from other DRPs can be found at the websites of the DRP Network, the Maryland DRP, and the University of Texas DRP.Acknowledgment
The DRP is generously supported by several organizations:- the National Science Foundation (CAREER grants DMS-1752672 and DMS-2045636)
- a Montague-CTE (Center for Teaching Excellence) Scholar grant
- a DRP Network mini-grant supported by the National Science Foundation (grant IUSE-1740143)