Fields Notes, Winter/Spring 2019 Fields_Notes_19.1 | Page 14

SPOTLIGHT PETER LILJEDAHL 2018 MARGARET SINCLAIR MEMORIAL AWARD LECTURE SPEAKER GEORGE HART 2018-2019 RCI LECTURE SPEAKER KANG LEE FIELDS CQAM PUBLIC LECTURE SPEAKER Peter Liljedahl is the recipient of the 2018 Margaret Sinclair Memorial Award, which recognizes innovation and excellence in mathematics education at any level. He is Associate Dean of Graduate Studies at Simon Fraser University and he began his career in mathematics education as a grades 8-12 mathematics and physics teacher at a school in Vancouver. His research interests are as wide-ranging as his influence: creativity and discovery in mathematics teaching and learning, affect; beliefs; classroom practice, professional growth of teachers, numeracy, instructional design and assessment in mathematics, student learning behavior (studenting), interactions between students in collaboration, teacher tensions, and building thinking classrooms. To the public, the Royal Canadian Institute for Science or RCI, as it is commonly know, is the place to go to hear and learn about science. Founded in 1849, the RCI is among the oldest societies of its kind in Canada. After more than a century, and with few interruptions during times of global crisis, RCI lectures continue to take place today. In 2013 Fields and the RCI partnered to bring outstanding mathematicians to Toronto to explore the math behind everyday life and they have continued to do so ever since. On December 2 and 3, 2018, George Hart, an interdisciplinary sculptor, mathematician, computer scientist and educator, recently retired from Stony Brook University, New York, came to deliver RCI and Fields lectures. His talks, titled Making Math Visible and From Mathematics to Sculpture, featured hands-on activities for audiences of all ages. Hart's mathematical research centers on novel polyhedral structures and algorithms for producing them. He has produced algorithms for generating various new classes of polyhedra, which he then presents to the world in sculptural forms. His mathematically informed sculptures, crafted with metal, wood, plastic, or 3D-printed, were on view during his presentations. The Fields CQAM Interdisciplinary Thematic Program aims to bring together industry and academia to work on problems found in a wide range of disciplines. With a common focus on modelling, computation, and data science, the Program features conferences, workshops, seminars, and public lectures to offer hands-on experience. On February 23, 2019, Liljedahl came to Fields to present the Margaret Sinclair Memorial Award Lecture. His talk, titled Thinking About Thinking Classrooms, explored a popular framework for teaching mathematics both in Canada and abroad; unpacking the framework’s effectiveness in transforming mathematics classrooms into spaces where students' mathematical thinking is considered ubiquitous and the norm. 12 As part of a Fields CQAM public lecture, Kang Lee (University of Toronto) came to Fields to give a talk on Affective Artificial Intelligence and its Applications on January 21, 2019. Drawing on more than two decades of research and insights from a century of psychological research on human emotion, Kang Lee discussed methods that artificial intelligence (AI) developers can use to develop intelligent systems with affective AI. This included the ability to detect, decode, interpret, and simulate human affects. In discussing AI’s shortcomings, Lee was hopeful about the future of this technology to transform our lives, asserting that AI IQ must work in tandem with EQ or emotional intelligence. The lecture was very popular and extremely well-attended.