2001 AWM Essay Contest:
Honorable Mention in the Middle School Student Category
Biography of Dr. Elizabeth Chambliss
by Evan Gilliland
Dr. Elizabeth Chambliss is the research director for the Program on the
Legal Profession at Harvard Law School. Dr. Chambliss earned her Ph.D. in
Sociology and her J.D. from the University of Wisconsin. She was a law
professor and author at the University of Texas before taking the position she
holds now.
Dr. Chambliss was motivated to accept a position that necessitated the
use of statistics because of her specific interests in sociology and law
two subjects that do not, on the surface, seem to have anything to do with math
at all but they do in Dr. Chambliss' work. In her position she uses
statistics to count lawyers. Her research is about who gets to be a lawyer,
what lawyers do, and about the role of lawyers in American society. These
questions are important for people who may want to become lawyers and for
people who teach lawyers how to find jobs. It is also important for government
officials who make the laws about what a lawyer is allowed to do. Dr. Chambliss
uses statistics to back up her arguments about who should get to be a lawyer
and what kinds of things lawyers should be allowed to do.
Because her career as a law teacher and a researcher requires her to use
mathematical and statistical data all the time, Dr. Chambliss says math,
especially statistics, is an important tool that she uses all the time. She is
currently working on projects for the American Bar Association that involve
gender and ethnic diversity in the legal profession. Her data is helpful in
setting policies for admission to law schools and establishing hiring practices
for law firms. Her statistics are being used in some reverse discrimination
trials where she is an expert witness.
Dr. Chambliss comes from a white, middle-class family and cultural
background. When she was growing up, her father was a Marine officer and her
mother was a homemaker. Now her father teaches college; his subject is drug
abuse and the criminal justice system. Her mother works for a local bar
association (that is an organization for lawyers), and her sister is a
paralegal in an immigration law firm.
The advice Dr. Chambliss would offer for students who are interested in
pursuing careers in the mathematical sciences is to not be afraid of math or
statistics! She says there are lots of "facts" in the world and lots of ways to
use statistics, and that it is easy once you get the hang of it. She also
believes that it is an important thing to know, so that you can make good
decisions in your personal life, and so that you can be a good citizen. She
thinks it will enable you to hold people (teachers, accountants) and entities
(government, corporations) accountable when they make decisions affecting you.
If you do not understand statistics, you will not understand what your
government is talking about when it tells you how it makes decisions. On the
other hand, people who are experts in statistics have a lot of influence in
politics.
Dr. Chambliss lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts and has lots of
different hobbies. She enjoys chess, soccer, cooking, detective stories,
gardening, and music. I enjoy most of those too!
Dr. Chambliss is well suited for a career as a researcher because of her
knowledge of statistics. According to her, if you have math expertise, any
field with a need for that expertise will find you just like it found her.
About the author: I am Evan Marcel Gilliland, student,
pianist, basket ballplayer. I am twelve years old and in the sixth grade at
O'Henry Middle School in Austin, Texas. My favorite subject in school is math.
My parents have convinced me that I have to do well in math in order to have
career options when I am older.
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