Computer Science Faculty
Dale
A. Brown - Professor of Mathematical and Computer Sciences
(330) 263-2363 / dabrown@wooster.edu
B.A. Hiram 1967; M.S., Ph.D. Syracuse 1969, 1973.
Dale Allen Brown, professor of mathematical and computer sciences at
The College of Wooster since 1987, specializes in neural networking, object-oriented
programming, and parallel computation. He is also an expert in linear
programming and block-design theory.
A graduate of Hiram College (1967), Brown earned his M.S. (1969) and
his Ph.D. (1973) from Syracuse University. He has several publications
to his credit, including “Computational Simulation of Composite
Ply Micromechanics Using Artificial Neural Networks” in Microcomputers
in Civil Engineering.
A member of several professional organizations, including the International
Neural Network Society, the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM),
and the Special Interest Group on Computer Science Education, Brown
was the recipient of Fellowships from the American Society for Engineering
Education in 1989, 1990, and 1991. He was also the recipient of a Fellowship
Award from the National Science Foundation in 1991.
Denise
Byrnes - Associate Professor of Mathematical Sciences
(330) 263-2489 / dbyrnes@wooster.edu
B.S., M.S., Ph.D. Ohio State 1985, 1987, 1992.
Denise D. Byrnes is an associate professor of mathematical sciences
at The College of Wooster and a member of the faculty since 1991. She
specializes in programming languages, distributed and parallel systems,
software engineering, and computer graphics. She also has an interest
in system design and specification as well as hard real-time systems.
Byrnes received her B.S. cum laude (1985), her M.S. (1987),
and her Ph.D. (1992) from The Ohio State University. She is the co-author
of “A Simulation Study of the Performance of Locking Algorithms
for Distributed Database Systems,” which was published in Conference
on Modeling and Simulation.
A member of the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineering,
the Association of Computing Machinery, and Phi Kappa Phi, Byrnes has
several honors to her credit, including being named Outstanding Organic
Chemistry Student at Ohio State.
Simon
Gray - Associate Professor of Computer Science
(330) 263-2284 / sgray@wooster.edu
B.A., M.A. University of Virginia 1982, 1984; M.S. University of North
Texas 1987; Ph.D. Kent State 1998.
Simon J.M. Gray is in his second stint as an associate professor of
computer science at The College of Wooster, joining the faculty first
in 1987 and again in 2003. His research interests include object-oriented
programming and programming and cognition. He teaches courses at all
levels of the computer science curriculum, as well as First-Year Seminar
and Senior Independent Study.
Gray earned his B.A.
(1982) and his M.A. (1984) at the University of Virginia. He also earned
an M.S. at the University of North Texas (1987) and his Ph.D. at Kent
State University (1998). He is the author of Data Structures in
Java: From Abstract Data Types to the Java Collections Framework (Addison-Wesley).
In addition, his work has been published in a variety of scholarly
journals.
Gray is a member of the Association for Computing Machinery, the Special
Interest Group for Computer Science Education and Software Engineering.
Charles
R. Hampton - Johnson Professor of Mathematical Sciences
(330) 263-2486 / hampton@wooster.edu
B.S. Michigan 1967; M.A., Ph.D. Wisconsin 1968, 1972.
Charles R. Hampton is the Johnson Professor of Mathematical Sciences
at The College of Wooster and a member of the faculty since 1972. An
expert in abstract algebra, the philosophy of mathematics, and the
mathematics of legislative redistricting, Hampton has traveled the
globe in pursuit of his study of mathematics.
A former
chair of the department, Hampton received his B.S. from the University
of Michigan (1967), and his M.A. (1968) and Ph.D. (1972) from the University
of Wisconsin at Madison.
The author
of “On the Semisimplicity of Group Rings of Solvable Groups" in Transactions
of the A.M.S., "Practical Application of District Compactness,” in Political
Geography, and a number of other articles, Hampton was a Fulbright-Hays
Lecturer at Cuttington University College in Liberia, West Africa,
in 1977-78. He also was a visiting scholar in the department of history
and philosophy of science department of Wolfson College at Cambridge
University in England in 1984-85 and again in the spring of 2003.
Hampton
is a member of the American Mathematical Society, the Mathematical
Association of America (MAA), the Ohio Section of the MAA, the Association
of Christians in the Mathematical Sciences, Phi Beta Kappa, and Phi
Kappa Phi.
James
Hartman - Professor of Mathematical Sciences
(330) 263-2239 / hartman@wooster.edu
B.S. Manchester 1975; M.S., Ph.D. Michigan State 1977, 1981.
James L. Hartman is a professor of mathematical sciences at The College
of Wooster, where he joined the faculty in 1981. He has an extensive
background in linear algebra, operator theory, probability and statistics,
computer algebra systems, and Advanced Placement calculus, as well
as a special interest in calculus reform, applied statistics, and invariant
subspace problems.
Hartman received his B.S. from Manchester College (1975). He earned
his M.S. (1977) and his Ph.D. (1981) from Michigan State University.
A member of the Mathematical Association of America, Kappa Mu Epsilon,
Sigma Pi Sigma, Honorary Physics Society, and Phi Kappa Phi, Hartman
is the author of a variety of articles, including “On a Conjecture
of Gohberg and Rodman” in the Journal of Linear Algebra and
Its Applications and “Studying Chaotic Systems Using Microcomputer
Simulations and Lyapunov Exponents” in the American Journal
of Physics. Hartman has also written two articles for AP Central
concerning AP calculus, and he continues to review materials for AP
Central.
Derek
Newland - Visiting Assistant Professor in Mathematics and Computer
Science
(330) 263-2554 / dnewland@wooster.edu
B.S. California, Davis 1999; M.A. California, San Diego 2003; California,
San Diego.
Derek Newland is a visiting assistant professor of mathematics and
computer science at The College of Wooster and a member of the faculty
since 2005. He specializes in number theory. He recently completed
his thesis involving Graph Zeta functions and co-authored a paper about
the Selberg Trace Formula for regular graphs. He also has an interest
in graph theory as well as algebra, combinatorics, and geometry.
Newland received his B.S. at UC Davis (1999), and his M.A. (2003),
C.Phil (2003), and Ph.D. (2005) at the University of California San
Diego. His publications include "The Contest Between the kernels
in the Selberg trace formula for the (q+1)-regular tree" in Contemporary
Mathematics.
Newland is affiliated with the American Mathematical Society (AMS)
and the Mathematics Association of America (MAA).
Pamela
B. Pierce - Associate Professor of Mathematical Sciences
(330) 263-2389 / ppierce@wooster.edu
B.A. Amherst 1985; M.Ed. Massachusetts 1986; M.S., M.Phil., Ph.D.
Syracuse 1988, 1992, 1994.
An associate professor of mathematical sciences at The College of
Wooster, Pamela B. Pierce specializes in the field of real analysis.
A member of the faculty
since 1994, she also has an interest in math education, specifically
preparing elementary and secondary education students to teach mathematics.
Pierce's specialty in real analysis is the study of functions of generalized
bounded variation. She has several research articles to her credit,
which have appeared in such journals as The Real Analysis Exchange, The
Journal of Mathematical Analysis and its Applications, American
Mathematical Monthly, and the Proceedings of the American
Mathematical Society.
Pierce is a member of the Mathematical Association of America, the
National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, and the Ohio Council of
Teachers of Mathematics. She is a Fellow in Project NExT, a nationwide
program for junior faculty in mathematics, and a member of Project
Kaleidoscope’s Faculty for the 21st Century, a group of faculty
leaders in mathematics and the sciences.
John
Ramsay - Professor of Mathematical Sciences
(330) 263-2579 / jramsay@wooster.edu
B.A. Berea 1980; M.S., Ph.D. Wisconsin (Madison) 1984, 1987.
John Ramsay is a professor of mathematical sciences at The College
of Wooster, where he has been a member of the faculty since 1987. He
is an authority on calculus reform, AP Calculus, calculus instruction
in Ireland, and undergraduate research. Other areas of interest and
experience include operations research and management science.
Ramsay
received his B.A. from Berea College (1980). He then went on to earn
his M.S. (1984) and his Ph.D. (1987) from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
A
member of the Institute for Operations Research and the Management
Sciences, the Mathematical Association of America (MAA), and the Association
of Christians in the Mathematical Sciences, Ramsay is the founder,
director, and faculty advisor for Wooster's Applied Mathematics Research
Experience (AMRE), a program that gives students an opportunity to
serve as consultants in the summer by researching and producing mathematical
solutions for clients in business, industry, education, and government.
In
addition, Ramsay was the project coordinator for Wooster's Curriculum
Reform Project from 1989-94; served for the MAA in the area of Resources
in Calculus; and has served as an exam reader/table leader since 1993
for Educational Testing Service AP Calculus exams.
Jennifer L. Roche - Assistant Professor of Mathematics and
Computer Science
(330) 263-1971 / jenroche@wooster.edu
B.A. Boston College 1998; M.S., Ph.D. Virginia 2001, 2005.
Jennifer L. Roche is an assistant professor of mathematics at The
College of Wooster where she joined the faculty in 2007. Her
areas of expertise include nonassociative algebras and matrix rings.
Roche received her B.A. from Boston College (1998) before earning
her M.S. (2001) and her Ph.D. (2005) from the University of Virginia
with her dissertation “Radices and Matrix Rings.” She
was selected as the outstanding graduate teaching instructor in mathematics
in 2005.
Prior to Wooster, she was a visiting assistant professor at Hobart
and William Smith Colleges (2005-2007). Roche is a Project NExT
fellow (2005-2006) and a member of the American Mathematical Society
and the Mathematical Association of America. She was an undergraduate
participant (1996) in Carleton College’s Summer Mathematics Program
for Women and a teaching assistant for the program is 2003. |