Difference between revisions of "David Patrick"

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'''David Patrick''' is a teacher and curriculum developer for [[Art of Problem Solving]] (AoPS).  Dr. Patrick joined AoPS in 2004.
 
'''David Patrick''' is a teacher and curriculum developer for [[Art of Problem Solving]] (AoPS).  Dr. Patrick joined AoPS in 2004.
  
=== Background ===
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== Background ==
  
 
Patrick grew up in Batavia, New York, and attended [[Carnegie Mellon University]], graduating in 1992 with a B.S. in Mathematics/Computer Science and an M.S. in Mathematics.  Patrick then attended the [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]], graduating with a Ph.D. in Mathematics in 1997.  Patrick studied under [[Michael Artin]], and his doctoral thesis was entitled ''Noncommutative Ruled Surfaces'', a branch of [[noncommutative]] [[algebraic geometry]].
 
Patrick grew up in Batavia, New York, and attended [[Carnegie Mellon University]], graduating in 1992 with a B.S. in Mathematics/Computer Science and an M.S. in Mathematics.  Patrick then attended the [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]], graduating with a Ph.D. in Mathematics in 1997.  Patrick studied under [[Michael Artin]], and his doctoral thesis was entitled ''Noncommutative Ruled Surfaces'', a branch of [[noncommutative]] [[algebraic geometry]].
  
 
After graduating MIT, Patrick was a [[postdoc]] at the [[University of Washington]] from 1997-2001, including a 6-month residency at the [[Mathematical Sciences Research Institute]] in Berkeley, California.
 
After graduating MIT, Patrick was a [[postdoc]] at the [[University of Washington]] from 1997-2001, including a 6-month residency at the [[Mathematical Sciences Research Institute]] in Berkeley, California.
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After leaving academia, Patrick worked as a mathematician at Applied Mathematics, Inc., in Gales Ferry, Connecticut, doing mathematical modeling.  He then spent some time playing poker semi-professionally before joining AoPS.
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== At AoPS ==
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Patrick is the author of the ''Introduction to Counting & Probability'' textbook and solutions manual, published by AoPS in 2005, and more generally manages the technical side of AoPS publishing endeavours.  Patrick also teaches several AoPS courses, helps run the [[USA Mathematical Talent Search]], and is the resident [[LaTeX]] and CSS guru.
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== Links ==
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* [[:User:DPatrick|DPatrick's Wiki User page]]
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* ''[http://www.artofproblemsolving.com/Books/AoPS_B_Item?page_id=3 Introduction to Counting & Probability]''
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* [http://www.cmu.edu Carnegie Mellon University]
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* [http://www.mit.edu Massachusetts Institute of Technology]
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* [http://www.washington.edu University of Washington]
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* [http://www.msri.org Mathematical Sciences Research Institute]
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* [http://www.applmath.com Applied Mathematics, Inc.]

Revision as of 16:01, 28 June 2006

David Patrick is a teacher and curriculum developer for Art of Problem Solving (AoPS). Dr. Patrick joined AoPS in 2004.

Background

Patrick grew up in Batavia, New York, and attended Carnegie Mellon University, graduating in 1992 with a B.S. in Mathematics/Computer Science and an M.S. in Mathematics. Patrick then attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, graduating with a Ph.D. in Mathematics in 1997. Patrick studied under Michael Artin, and his doctoral thesis was entitled Noncommutative Ruled Surfaces, a branch of noncommutative algebraic geometry.

After graduating MIT, Patrick was a postdoc at the University of Washington from 1997-2001, including a 6-month residency at the Mathematical Sciences Research Institute in Berkeley, California.

After leaving academia, Patrick worked as a mathematician at Applied Mathematics, Inc., in Gales Ferry, Connecticut, doing mathematical modeling. He then spent some time playing poker semi-professionally before joining AoPS.

At AoPS

Patrick is the author of the Introduction to Counting & Probability textbook and solutions manual, published by AoPS in 2005, and more generally manages the technical side of AoPS publishing endeavours. Patrick also teaches several AoPS courses, helps run the USA Mathematical Talent Search, and is the resident LaTeX and CSS guru.

Links