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Students finding strength in numbers

Students finding strength in numbers

Top image: The 2023 Colorado Math Circle team that competed in the American Regions Mathematics League national competition, coached by program alumnus Thomas Davids (far left, holding plaque). (Photo: Silva Chang)

Started by 精品SM在线影片 applied mathematics Teaching Professor Silva Chang, Colorado Math Circle is celebrating 20 years of bringing middle and high school students together in a community that has fun with math


It鈥檚 not always easy to be the student who does math for fun.

Even if the other kids aren鈥檛 weird about it, they still might not understand, so sometimes it can be easier to just brush it off. 鈥淥h, math? Yeah, it鈥檚 OK.鈥 But no, math is wonderful.

When one of Silva Chang鈥檚 high school teachers showed her a brochure for the six-week , she wasn鈥檛 necessarily doing math for fun in her free time, but she was very good at it.

portrait of Silva Chang

Silva Chang, a 精品SM在线影片 teaching professor of applied mathematics, was inspired to start the Colorado Math Circle in part from her high school experience in the Hampshire College Summer Studies in Mathematics program.

鈥淚 think he knew that I needed to get out of the city,鈥 recalls Chang, a 精品SM在线影片 full teaching professor of applied mathematics. 鈥淢y parents were not college educated, they didn鈥檛 speak English, so I think he saw it as an opportunity that would open up my worldview.

鈥(HCSSiM) was a program where we did math 24-7, and it was the most fun I鈥檝e ever had. I can say I wouldn鈥檛 be doing what I鈥檓 doing today if I hadn鈥檛 had that experience. (The program) was transformative, it made math really fun, it made it silly, it presented math as an art form that鈥檚 not just useful for practical applications, but that鈥檚 beautiful by itself.鈥

Chang鈥檚 experiences at HCSSiM inspired her 20 years ago to start the , an extracurricular organization that offers opportunities and mentoring for middle and high school math enthusiasts around Colorado. Further, she was interviewed about how HCSSiM inspired her for the documentary 鈥,鈥 of which there will be at 3:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 2, in Benson Earth Sciences room 180.

鈥淚 knew of certain students along the Front Range鈥攁ll top students, some nationally ranked鈥攁nd I wanted to be able to bring them together so they would have peer support,鈥 Chang explains of starting Colorado Math Circle in 2005. 鈥淪ome students can find peers, but some can鈥檛. If you say, 鈥業 enjoy doing math problems all day,鈥 people might laugh at you, and you might try to hide that interest. I thought there should be a place where students didn鈥檛 have to hide their enthusiasm for math.鈥

鈥楥ome and enjoy math鈥

For Chang, an interest in math grew from attending John Dewey High School in Brooklyn, New York, a school with a nontraditional pass/fail grading system and a longer, eight-hour day that allowed students to take more classes and explore their interests.

If you go

What: Free special screening of 鈥淗unting Yellow Pigs,鈥 a documentary about the Hampshire College Summer Studies in Mathematics program

When: 3:30-5 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 2

Where: Benson Earth Sciences room 180

Chang鈥檚 parents had emigrated from southeast China, and while they may not have been intimately familiar with the vagaries of the U.S. educational system, they knew that education led to opportunity, Chang says. However, when Chang鈥檚 teacher suggested she attend the six-week HCSSiM, her parents initially didn鈥檛 understand the significance.

With some parental convincing and bolstered by her membership on a New York City-wide high school team of top math students, Chang applied and was accepted. Initially, her family was asked to pay a small amount to attend, 鈥渁nd my parents said no. They didn鈥檛 have a lot of money, but I don鈥檛 think that was their reason. They were nervous about me leaving home. So, someone from HCSSiM called me up and said, 鈥榊ou turned down the acceptance, can you tell us why?鈥 and I said the reason was financial, so they offered a full scholarship.鈥

HCSSiM was started by Hampshire College founding faculty member , who died June 20. Program organizers describe it as 鈥渃ollege-level mathematics for talented and highly motivated high school students. It is demanding and expanding. Participants spend a major portion of each day actively engaged in doing mathematics (not simply learning the results of mathematics).鈥

鈥(David Kelly) was running the program when I attended in the 1970s, and he set the tone,鈥 Chang says. 鈥淗e just made it fun. Some of us were coming from more competitive or grade-oriented backgrounds, but his perspective was, 鈥楥ome and enjoy math. Math is fun, math is beautiful, get what you can out of this program, take away what you can.鈥 They were teaching fairly high-level math, but it wasn鈥檛 competitive at all. It was like, 鈥楲et鈥檚 all do math together, let鈥檚 all learn together.鈥欌

Creating a community

middle school students doing paper-folding math activity

Participants in the Colorado Math Circle engage in a hands-on math learning activity. (Photo: Silva Chang)

After Chang came to 精品SM在线影片 and her children entered high school, she began thinking that she鈥檇 like to create a program similar in spirit and practice to HCSSiM, where students could come have fun doing math with others who love it, too. She also thought about the New York City-wide math team of which she鈥檇 been a member and wondered if there was a way to combine the two.

In 2005, she began contacting Front Range high schools and students to assemble a 15-member team that would compete in the 2006 (ARML) national math competition at the University of Nevada. The team won first place in its division that year 鈥渁nd that was very motivating,鈥 Chang recalls, 鈥渂ecause we were competing against teams from around the country.鈥

Colorado Math Circle has sent a team comprised of students from around Colorado to that competition every year since, but after that first year Chang thought it was important to create a place for students who may not want to compete but who want to get together to do, discuss and learn math.

During the school year, students either come to the 精品SM在线影片 campus or participate in weekly problem-solving Zoom sessions. Initially created with a focus on high school students, Colorado Math Circle grew to include middle school students and help those who are interested prepare for the MATHCOUNTS competition.

鈥淭he first year we were more focused on preparing for competition, but after that we expanded it to a place where students could come learn about a variety of math topics,鈥 Chang says. 鈥淢embers of my department have come to give talks about their work, and we鈥檝e been doing it long enough that we have math circle alumni coming back now.鈥

For the first 17 years of Colorado Math Circle, Chang was the sole director, but now program alumnus Thomas Davids serves as co-director and ARML coach.

In its 20 years, Colorado Math Circle has steadily grown; last year, more than 110 students from 45 Colorado schools participated. Over the years, students from as far as Grand Junction, Pueblo and Rangely have participated. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 draw many students from any one school鈥攖he two largest are Fairview and Cherry Creek鈥攊t鈥檚 often one student from one school,鈥 Chang says. 鈥淭he main goal of the Colorado Math Circle is to teach students math, yes, and teach them problem-solving skills, but what we really provide is a community.

鈥淭hese students teach themselves a lot of math, so the need we fill is helping them to create a community of friends who love math, too.鈥


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