Newsletter Latmath Conferences to Promote Role Models for Young Latinx
Institute for Pure and Applied Mathematics a National Science Foundation Math Institute ANNUAL at the University of California, Los Angeles FALL 2019 SPEARHEADINGNEWSLETTER LATMATH CONFERENCES TO PROMOTE ROLE MODELS FOR YOUNG LATINX As an aspiring mathematical scientist in Mathematics. While Toro started her But even as she was experiencing so much growing up in Colombia, Tatiana Toro career focusing on geometric measure success, Toro became concerned that had plenty of role models who looked like theory, today she considers her research many young Latinx weren’t getting the her. “I was unaware of the color of my skin to lie at the interface of geometric measure encouragement they needed to pursue until I came to the United States for theory, partial differential equations, and careers in the mathematical sciences. graduate school at age 23,” Toro says, harmonic analysis, with a focus on the laughing. “But once I was here, I learned that properties of interfaces arising in “noisy” it is a very different experience for a Latina minimization problems. born in the United States who has an interest in mathematics.” Along the way Toro has received considerable recognition and support for Toro excelled in her chosen field early on, her work, including an Alfred P. Sloan competing for her native country in the Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship, an International Mathematical Olympiad NSF Mathematical Sciences Postdoctoral in 1981, when she was 17. After earning Research Fellowship, two Simons Foundation her bachelor’s degree in Colombia, she Fellowships and a Guggenheim Foundation enrolled at Stanford University, graduating Fellowship. She was elected as a fellow of the with her PhD in 1992.
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