Stories, Puzzles, and Problems - Applying Computational Thinking Principles: 2023 David Poole Lecture in Mathematics
Community Speaker Series featuring Richard Hoshino
Event Details
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Friday, November 10, 2023
4:00 PM - 5:30 PM
Otonabee College Room 203
Cost: free
The annual David Poole Lecture in Mathematics is part of the Trent University Community Speaker Series, established through philanthropy. The lecture will bring the importance of mathematics and mathematics education into the spotlight with engaging talks aimed at the Trent community, local teachers and students, and the general public. The 2023 annual David Poole Lecture will be presented by Richard Hoshino, an Associate Teaching Professor at the Vancouver campus of Northeastern University.
Stories, Puzzles, and Problems - Applying Computational Thinking Principles
The core of the talk will be three math puzzles, all of which will be accessible to every person in the audience. In the process of solving these three puzzles, the four principles of Computational Thinking will be uncovered and discover how this "21st-century mindset" can enable us to tackle complex challenges with both confidence and impact.
About the Speaker
Richard Hoshino is an Associate Teaching Professor at the Vancouver campus of Northeastern University. Prior to joining Northeastern in 2020, Richard was a mathematician for the Government of Canada, a post-doctoral fellow at the National Institute of Informatics in Tokyo, and a professor of mathematics and computer science at Quest University Canada in Squamish, British Columbia. He obtained his Ph.D. in Mathematics from Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Richard has published 36 research papers across numerous fields and is the author of "The Math Olympian", a Young Adult novel. In addition to his work at Northeastern University, Richard also runs a thriving consulting business where he builds optimal timetables for high schools and optimal schedules for organizations.
Richard has visited over 50 high schools over the past decade, conducting workshops on problem-solving and computational thinking for thousands of students and teachers. He was the 2017 recipient of the Adrien Pouliot Award, awarded by the Canadian Mathematical Society as a lifetime achievement award to celebrate “significant and sustained contributions to mathematics education.
Contact Info
For more information, contact: alumni@trentu.ca or math@trentu.ca