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Chad M. Topaz    

Data Scientist, Professor, Social Justice Advocate, Professor of Mathematics at Williams College & Co-Founder of the Institute for the Quantitative Study of Inclusion, Diversity, and Equity

Professor of Mathematics Chad Topaz (A.B. Harvard, Ph.D. Northwestern) is an applied mathematician and data scientist. His current research applies quantitative tools to expose and remedy social injustice, and is based out of the Institute for the Quantitative Study of Inclusion, Diversity, and Equity (QSIDE), which he co-founded. Chad is also Professor of Mathematics at Williams College and, previously, at Macalester College, where his research on complex and nonlinear systems has been supported by the National Science Foundation from 2006 – 2021.

Passionate about scientific communication and discourse, Chad has delivered over 170 talks at colleges, universities, and scientific meetings, and has co-organized numerous interdisciplinary minisymposia and workshops on quantitative approaches to social justice, chemical reaction diffusion systems, biological swarming, and related topics. His honors include a New Directions Research Professorship at the Institute for Mathematics and its Applications (the first given to a liberal arts college faculty member), a Kavli Frontiers Fellowship from the National Academy of Sciences, a Board of Trustees Award from Macalester College, an Equity and Diversity Visiting Fellowship from the University of Auckland, an Erskine Fellowship from the University of Canterbury, and the Outstanding Paper Award of the Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics. Chad’s work has been covered widely in the national and international press.

Chad’s teaching career stands on an intense interest in human learning, on scrupulous attention to learners’ needs and challenges, and on the belief that education is both an art and a science. An avid follower of scholarly research in education studies and educational psychology, he has won UCLA’s Robert Sorgenfrey Distinguished Teaching Award in mathematics and Macalester College’s Rossmann Excellence in Teaching Award. With teaching interests including data science, calculus, scientific computing, differential equations, dynamical systems, mathematical modeling, and complex analysis, Chad also has created a seminar for first year students called “Death, Devastation, Blood, War, Horror, and Mathematics.” Interested in department- and institution-level perspectives, Chad enjoys serving as a program design consultant and external department reviewer. One of his greatest fulfillments has been the melding of his teaching and research lives in the sphere of undergraduate research. He has advised over 130 summer research, capstone, independent study, and honors experiences, with nearly 50% of these for members of underrepresent/excluded gender and/or racial/ethnic groups. Chad has been invited to speak about teaching to audiences such as the Annapolis Group, the New York Six Colleges, the Associated Colleges of the Midwest, the Minnesota Private Colleges Council, as well as numerous colleges and universities.

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