Profile: Robert E. Woodrow, University of Calgary
Profile by -Ed.
Mathematicians don't have the forum of the Olympics to show off their
grit, determination, patience, discipline, heart, courage and harmony
between physical and mental endurance. In fact, this is not entirely
right. There are aspiring mathematics students who participate in local
contests leading up to national mathematical olympiads. A small
number of
them take part in national training programs. Six students are sent each
year to the International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO)
08.
Robert Woodrow is the Olympiad Corner Editor of
Crux
Mathematicorum with Mathematical Mayhem, a
Canadian problem-solving journal at the senior secondary and university
undergraduate levels with an international following of those who practice
or teach mathematics. For more on CRUX with MAYHEM see
http://journals.cms.math.ca/CRUX
Professor Woodrow is a Canadian logician who works in a branch of Model
Theory called the Theory of Relations. One of his interests is in the
study of homogeneous structures such as the Random Graph (the graph almost
surely obtained on the natural numbers when the existence of an edge
between two vertices is decided (independently) by flipping a coin).
Woodrow took over writing the Olympiad Corner from Murray Klamkin a decade
ago. While Klamkin is well known as a problem poser, problem solver, and
coach of winning Olympiad teams, (and a member of one of the first winning
teams of the Putnam competition), Woodrow came to the Editorship without
having made any great splash on the contest scene. His interest is in
fostering student interest in problem solving and in mathematics, with the
major international contests being only the tip of the iceberg.
Of course contests are not the only way that students come to
mathematics-some of the best mathematicians approach the subject entirely
differently. Over the years Woodrow has been involved in other work of
the Canadian Mathematical Society
09.
Andrew J. Irwin
2001-03-19