Dr. Sarah J. Greenwald's home page

Office 326 Walker Hall, (828) 262-2363     Department Fax 265-8617     E-mail address greenwaldsj@appstate.edu or greenwaldsj@gmail.com
Mailing address Dr. Sarah J. Greenwald, 121 Bodenheimer Drive, Department of Mathematics, 326 Walker Hall, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC 28608
I am an associate professor in the Department of Mathematics and a Women's Studies core faculty member at Appalachian State University in the northwestern mountains of North Carolina, and a winner of a 2005 MAA Alder Award for distinguished teaching. I received my Ph.D. from the Department of Mathematics at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, and my B.S. in math from the Department of Mathematics at Union College in Schenectady, NY. I was born in Charlotte, NC, but grew up in Buffalo, NY. For more information, see my academic cv and recent talks and a short biography.

Summer 2008

MAT 2240 Introduction to Linear Algebra
MAT 3610 Introduction to Geometry

Here is info on courses that I previously taught.

Research My specialty is Riemannian Geometry and my advisor is Wolfgang Ziller.

Rubik's Cube games on spheres - my research description aimed at undergraduate math majors.
Diameters of Spherical Alexandrov Spaces and Constant Curvature One Orbifolds, Indiana University Mathematics Journal, Vol 49, Num 4 (Winter) 2000, pp. 1449-1479.

  • Asymptotic Expansion of the Heat Kernel for Orbifolds, with Emily Dryden and Carolyn Gordon, to appear, Michigan Mathematical Journal, Volume 56, 2008.
  • Diameters of 3-Sphere Quotients, with Bill Dunbar, Jill McGowan and Catherine Searle, to appear, Differential Geometry and its Applications.

    Select Pedagogical Articles

  • Incorporating the Mathematical Achievements of Women and Minority Mathematicians into Classrooms, in "From Calculus to Computers: Using the Last 200 Years of Mathematics History in the Classroom" (eds. Richard Jardine and Amy Shell-Gellasch), MAA Notes, Volume 68, 2005, pp. 183-200. Also see project assignment, references for students, and Mon Feb 18- Mon Feb 25 for the mathematics discussed after each student presentation.
  • NCCTM Centroid Columns on Women and Minorities in Mathematics - Incorporating Their Mathematical Achievements Into School Classrooms
  • Futurama πk - Mathematics in the Year 3000, with Tom Georgoulias, and Marc Wichterich, Math Horizons, Vol 11, Num 4, April 2004, pp. 12-15.
  • PRIMUS Special Section on Popular Culture in the Mathematics Classroom, guest editor with Andrew Nestler, Vol XIV, Num 1, March 2004, pp. 1-39.
  • Taking Full Advantage of Sketchpad 4 - Why You Can't Live Without It, with Brian Felkel, ICTCM Proceedings, November 2003, pp. 85-89. Sketchpad 4 Classroom Activities and Explorations
  • Coffee Cooling on A TI-CBL Unit and in Maple, with Bill Bauldry, ICTCM Proceedings, November 2001, pp. 151-154. Related Web Resources.
  • The Use of Letter Writing Projects in Teaching Geometry, PRIMUS, Vol X, Num 1, March, 2000, pp. 1-14.

    Select Talks and Workshops

  • Recent Abstracts and a Short Biography
  • Good News, Everyone! Mathematical Morsels from The Simpsons and Futurama, SimpsonsMath.com and Futurama Math, Various Locations, and Media Coverage and Articles
  • Geometry of the Earth and Universe Labs: From the Classroom to Current Research, Creative Visualization Labs, session of talks organized with Cathy Gorini and Mary Platt, Joint Mathematics Meeting, Baltimore, MD, January 18, 2003.
  • What is a Mathematician? Math is Not Only a Young Man's Game, and Women in Math: Combining the Disciplines of Mathematics, Women's Studies and History, MathFest 2000.
  • Rubik's Cube Games on Spheres: Geometry of Orbifolds

    Other Interests

  • My mathematical ancestors from The Mathematics Genealogy Project
  • I am the project coordinator of the Bialobrzegi ShtetLink and the Book of Remembrance of the Community of Bialobrzeg for JewishGen: The Home of Jewish Genealogy. The projects strive to research and preserve information about small Jewish communities that were destroyed in World War II. My great-grandmother lived here (it was the Russian empire back then!) in the late 1800s.