Innovator Vol. 38 No. 1 - Fall 07: RE-IMAGINING TEACHER EDUCATION
Hyman Bass
On Friday, July 27, Professor Hyman Bass was awarded the National Medal of Science at a White House ceremony.
Hyman Bass is a Professor of Mathematics Education at the School of Education and Roger Lyndon Collegiate Professor of Mathematics at the U-M College of Literature, Science and the Arts. His mathematical research publications cover broad areas of algebra, with connections to geometry, topology and number theory. He has held visiting research and faculty positions at mathematical centers around the world, including Berkeley, Paris, Bombay, Rio de Janeiro, Cambridge, Stockholm, Mexico, Rome, Trieste, Hong Kong, and Jerusalem. He has lectured widely, in particular as a Phi Beta Kappa National Visiting Scholar. He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Bass was president of the American Mathematical Society, and chair of the Mathematical Sciences Education Board at the NRC, and of the Committee on Education of the American Mathematical Society. He is President of the International Commission on Mathematics Instruction.
Professor Bass is the first U-M researcher to win the honor in 21 years. The National Medal of Science, established in 1959, honors individuals for pioneering scientific research in a range of fields that enhance understanding of the world and lead to innovations and technologies that give the United States its global economic edge. An article about the award can be found on the U-M website:
http://www.umich.edu/news/Releases/2007/Jul07/bass.html
