{"id":15548,"date":"2020-02-21T11:03:45","date_gmt":"2020-02-21T15:03:45","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.samsi.info\/?page_id=15548"},"modified":"2020-10-12T08:55:28","modified_gmt":"2020-10-12T12:55:28","slug":"2020-blackwell-tapia-conference","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.samsi.info\/diversity-and-inclusion\/2020-blackwell-tapia-conference\/","title":{"rendered":"Blackwell-Tapia Conference and Award Ceremony"},"content":{"rendered":"

Congratulations to the 2020 Blackwell-Tapia Prize Winner: University of Washington, Professor of Mathematics, Tatiana Toro<\/a>\u00a0<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n

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The 2020 Blackwell-Tapia Conference was postponed. The organizers are continuing to monitor and heed the guidelines put forth by the Centers for Disease Control<\/a> to plan for COVID-19 disruptions, The in-person conference dates for the next Blackwell-Tapia Conference will be announced as soon as it is safe for large gatherings to take place.\u00a0<\/strong>\"\"<\/a><\/p>\n

Description: <\/strong>Held every other year, the host rotates among NSF Mathematics Institutes. The conference and prize honor David Blackwell, the first African-American member of the National Academy of Science, and Richard Tapia, winner of the National Medal of Science in 2010, two seminal figures who inspired a generation of African-American, Native American, and Latino\/Latina students to pursue careers in mathematics. The Blackwell-Tapia Prize recognizes a mathematician who has contributed significantly to research in his or her area of expertise, and who has served as a role model for mathematical scientists and students from underrepresented minority groups or has contributed in other significant ways to addressing the problem of under-representation of minorities in math.<\/p>\n

Goals of the conference<\/b>:<\/p>\n