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Hortensia Soto

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mexican–American mathematics educator

Hortensia Soto is a Mexican–Americanmathematics educator who is a professor of mathematics atColorado State University. In May 2018, she was appointed Associate Secretary of theMathematical Association of America (MAA). She became the president of the MAA in 2022.

Early life and education

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Soto was born in asod house inBelén del Refugio [es], part of the municipality ofTeocaltiche inJalisco, Mexico.[1] Her family moved to a farm nearMorrill, Nebraska when she was one year old, and she grew up in Nebraska.[1][2][3][4] Her talent for mathematics was encouraged in elementary school and recognized in high school; already at that age she was called on to act as a substitute mathematics teacher.[3]

AtEastern Wyoming College, Soto started a political science degree.[5] Soto has a bachelor's degree in mathematics and a master's degree in mathematics education fromChadron State College in Nebraska, earned in 1988 and 1989 respectively. She earned a second master's degree in mathematics at theUniversity of Arizona in 1994, and completed Ph.D. in educational mathematics at theUniversity of Northern Colorado in 1996.[6]

Career

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Soto worked at theUniversity of Southern Colorado from 1989 to 1992 as director of the Mathematics Learning Center. In 1995, she became an assistant professor of mathematics at the university, earning tenure there as an associate professor in 2001; the university became known as Colorado State University–Pueblo in 2003. In 2005 she moved to the University of Northern Colorado, taking a step down to become an assistant professor again. She was promoted to associate professor in 2008 and to full professor in 2014,[6] before moving to Colorado State University as a professor of mathematics.[7]

At the University of Northern Colorado, Soto founded and directed a summer program for high school girls, Las Chicas de Matemáticas: UNC Math Camp for Young Women, from 2008 to 2014,[2][3][8] and returned to rural Nebraska to participate in a teacher education program there, Math in the Middle.[3] She is a fellow ofProject NExT, and has been governor of the Rocky Mountain Section of theMathematical Association of America.[2] She is also a principal investigator of theEmbodied Mathematical Imagination & Cognition project.[9]

She has a long association with the MAA and has been increasingly involved with its governance.[10] In May 2018, she took over from Gerald Venama as its Associate Secretary.[11] In October 2021, she was elected as President-Elect of MAA and is serving a two year term, starting February 1, 2022.[12]

Recognition

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In 2001, Chadron State College gave Soto their Distinguished Young Alumni Award.[4]

In 2012, the Mathematical Association of America (MAA) gave Soto their Meritorious Service Award.[2][6] She was the 2016 winner of the Burton W. Jones Distinguished Teaching Award of the Rocky Mountain Section of the MAA,[13] and one of the 2018 winners of theDeborah and Franklin Haimo Awards for Distinguished College or University Teaching of Mathematics.[1]

She is included in a deck of playing cards featuring notable women mathematicians published by theAssociation for Women in Mathematics.[14]

References

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  1. ^abc"2018 MAA Awards"(PDF), Mathematics People,Notices of the American Mathematical Society,65 (5):605–606, May 2018
  2. ^abcd"Hortensia Soto",Board of governors, Mathematical Association of America, retrieved2021-01-08
  3. ^abcd"Hortensia Soto",Latinxs and Hispanics in the Mathematical Sciences, 2019, retrieved2021-01-08
  4. ^abChadron State to honor four alumni, Chadron State College, September 25, 2001, retrieved2021-01-08
  5. ^"Testimonios: Dr. Hortensia Soto".MATH VALUES. April 15, 2023. Retrieved2024-04-05.
  6. ^abcCurriculum vitae(PDF), University of Northern Colorado, retrieved2021-01-08
  7. ^"Faculty",Department of Mathematics, Colorado State University, retrieved2021-01-08
  8. ^Silvy, Tyler (June 10, 2015),"University of Northern Colorado math camp for local Latinas called off due to lack of funds",Greeley Tribune
  9. ^"The EMIC Team",Embodied Mathematical Imagination & Cognition, retrieved2021-01-08
  10. ^"Hortensia Soto".Mathematical Association of America. Retrieved2022-12-03.
  11. ^"MAA Thanks Outgoing Associate Secretary, Welcomes New Officer to Role".Mathematical Association of America. August 22, 2018. Retrieved2022-12-03.
  12. ^"Election | Mathematical Association of America".maa.org. Retrieved2024-04-05.
  13. ^The Burton W. Jones Distinguished Teaching Award, MAA Rocky Mountain Section, retrieved2021-01-08
  14. ^"Mathematicians of EvenQuads Deck 1".awm-math.org. Retrieved2022-06-18.

External links

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Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hortensia_Soto&oldid=1320569711"
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