TAPIA HONORED
BY AMERICAN MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY
Well-known Champion of Outreach Given Distinguished Public Service Award
Rice University mathematician
Richard Tapia has received the American Mathematical Societys Award
for Distinguished Public Service.
The award, given every
two years to a research mathematician who has made a distinguished contribution
to the mathematics profession through public service in the preceding five
years, was presented during the societys annual meeting in Phoenix on
Jan. 8.
"Richard Tapia
fully exemplifies all the traits this award seeks to extol," said Rice
President Malcolm Gillis. "Quite apart from his many contributions to
his discipline, Richard is a tireless worker for anything that advances opportunities
for under-represented minorities and women."
AMS is honoring Tapia
for inspiring and teaching thousands of people, from elementary school students
to senior citizens, to study and appreciate the mathematical sciences. The
prize citation states, "His dedication to opening doors for underrepresented
minorities and women is legendary, as is his determination to reach students
who would otherwise be discouraged or overlooked. Educational and outreach
programs that he has founded and leads, such as the Rice University Center
for Excellence and Equity in Education (CEEE), represent a continuing tribute
to his energy and perseverance."
Tapia, the Noah Harding
Professor of Computational and Applied Mathematics, also serves as associate
director of graduate studies and as director of CEEE. He is internationally
known for his research in the computational and mathematical sciences and
is a national leader in education and outreach programs.
Tapia is a founding
member of the Society for the Advancement of Chicanos and Native Americans
in Science (SACNAS), the premier professional organization for Latino and
Native American scientists. Among his many honors, Tapia was the first native-born
Hispanic inducted into the National Academy of Engineering, and he was appointed
by President Clinton to the National Science Board in 1996. The White House
again recognized Tapia in 1996 as a recipient of the Presidential Award for
Excellence in Science, Mathematics, and Engineering Mentoring.
"Richard's dedicated
and powerful advocacy for minority access to science and engineering educational
and career opportunities has had enormous positive impact in our department's
program and at Rice generally but reaches far beyond campus boundaries,"
said William Symes, Noah Harding Professor of Computational and Applied Mathematics
and chair of the Department of Computational and Applied Mathematics. "It
is good to see his exceptional leadership appropriately acknowledged in a
national context."
Born in Los Angeles
to parents who emigrated separately from Mexico as young teenagers in search
of educational opportunities for themselves and future generations, Tapia
was the first in his family to attend college.
He joined Rices
faculty in 1970 and helped build the Department of Computational and Applied
Mathematics (previously mathematical sciences). He served as department chair
from 1978-83. His research is in the area of numerical optimization methods.
He has authored or co-authored two books and more than 80 research papers
and has directly supervised 31 Ph.D. students.
Due to Tapia's efforts,
Rice has received national recognition for its educational outreach programs
and Rices Department of Computational and Applied Mathematics has become
a national leader in producing
women and underrepresented minority doctoral recipients in the mathematical
sciences.
Under Tapia's direction,
Rice's NSF-funded Alliances for Graduate Education in the Professoriate (AGEP)
Program provides opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students in
science, mathematics, and engineering to participate in university activities
and work for the summer under the guidance of Rice researchers. Through CEEE,
Tapia has helped hundreds of K-12 teachers through summer programs like TeacherTECH.
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