Scientific society cites ASU professor for mentoring underrepresented
students

TEMPE, Ariz. - Carlos Castillo-Chavez, a professor of mathematics,
statistics and life sciences at Arizona State University, is been honored
once again by the American Association for the Advancement of Science
(AAAS), this time for his efforts to help underrepresented students earn
doctoral degrees in the sciences.
 
Castillo-Chavez, an ASU Regents' Professor and Joaquin Bustoz Jr. Professor
of Mathematical Biology, will receive the 2007 AAAS Mentor Award during a
Feb. 16 ceremony at the 2008 AAAS Annual Meeting in Boston. This will be the
second notable honor given to Castillo-Chavez in recent months by the
prestigious international scientific society. In October, Castillo-Chavez, a
mathematical theoretical biologist, was named as one of the 471 newly
elected AAAS Fellows.
 
In announcing the mentoring award, the AAAS noted that Castillo-Chavez
served as dissertation adviser for four Hispanic Americans who earned their
doctorates in mathematics or the biological sciences. Another 11 Hispanic
Americans whom he mentored in an undergraduate research program have gone on
to earn doctorates in the biological sciences, mathematics, statistics or
bioinformatics at various institutions.
 
For more than a decade, Castillo-Chavez also has raised money for and run a
summer research program - the Mathematical and Theoretical Biology Institute
- aimed at encouraging Hispanic American and American Indian undergraduate
students to enter doctoral programs with an emphasis on mathematical or
computational biology. As a result of his summer research program, 59
Hispanic Americans and American Indians have gone on to graduate programs.
As the recommendation from the award selection committee notes,
Castillo-Chavez 's work "has the potential to change the face of Ph.D.
scientists who are researchers in the mathematics and computational biology
area."
 
Castillo-Chavez, who specializes in the study of disease evolution, earned
his doctorate from the University of Wisconsin and spent 18 years at Cornell
University before joining the faculty at Arizona State in 2004. He has
published nearly 160 scientific articles and has authored or co-authored
nine books.
 
In a letter supporting Castillo-Chavez's nomination for the mentor award,
Simon Levin, Moffett Professor of Biology at Princeton University, said that
Castillo-Chavez has been a national leader in mentoring students. 
 
"They are all fiercely loyal to Carlos and appreciative of what he has done
for them," Levin wrote. "But perhaps more importantly, they are as exciting
and excited a group of young scientists as I have ever met. Carlos has
managed to transfer much of his own enthusiasm for science and mathematics
to them, and it is impressive indeed."
 
Several students who studied under Castillo-Chavez submitted letters in
support of his nomination for the award, including one from a Hispanic
American woman who said his summer program for undergraduates had changed
her life. "I am the first one in my family to get an education beyond high
school," she wrote. She said Castillo-Chavez "gave me the confidence needed
not only to dream big but also to achieve those big dreams through hard work
and dedication." She mentioned two other students in the program who
benefited from Castillo-Chavez's constant encouragement: a young man who
grew up in one of the most violent neighborhoods in Puerto Rico and went on
to receive a doctoral degree from Cornell University; and a Hispanic
American woman, the oldest of eight children, who had to work throughout her
undergraduate years and spent four hours commuting to class each day. She
went on to graduate school.
 
The AAAS Mentor Award honors those who have mentored and guided significant
numbers of underrepresented students to earn a doctoral degree in the
sciences, as well as scholarship, activism and community-building on behalf
of underrepresented groups. According to the AAAS, this award is directed
toward individuals in the early or mid-career stage who have mentored
students for fewer than 25 years. The American Association for the
Advancement of Science is the world's largest general scientific society and
publisher of the journal Science. It's mission is to "advance science and
serve society." The nonprofit AAAS was founded in 1848. Additional
information is at: www.aaas.org/aboutaaas/awards
<http://www.aaas.org/aboutaaas/awards> .

 



Bonnie Napier
 <http://www.azhttp.com/> AZhttp, Inc.


 

Phone: 480.998.0246
Fax: 480.998.0248



 

 


 

 <http://www.linkedin.com/e/sig/906643/> 

 

Reply via email to