2006 Essay Contest
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Biographies of Women in Math
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2006 AWM Essay Contest:
College Honorable Mention
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Lori Chibnik: Applying Statistics to Public Health
by Miranda Fix
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Lori Chibnik never slows down. She was once in a study for which she was
required to wear a pedometer for a week, and despite a major thunderstorm that
kept her inside for a day, Lori accumulated so many more steps than anyone else
that she was considered an outlier. I first met Lori, and noticed her aptitude
for walking far and fast, at Boston University's Summer Institute for Training
in Biostatistics (SIBS), where she took on multiple roles as program organizer,
camp counselor, and liaison between students and faculty. During the school
year, Lori also juggles several jobs—while working on her PhD thesis, she also
works with researchers at Brigham and Women's Hospital, a teaching affiliate of
Harvard Medical School, and teaches introductory Statistics at Boston
University.
The youngest of four children, Lori grew up with strong ties to family. The
people who had the greatest influence on her were her mother and maternal
grandparents. She lost her mom to cancer when she was in high school. They were
very close. Her Zadie and Bubbi immigrated from Poland/Belarus and
Hungary/Slovakia respectively, and met in Chicago. Her grandparents escaped the
Nazis, but many of their aunts, uncles, and cousins did not. Lori attended
Hebrew school from kindergarten through high school. As with most Jews of
her generation, she was taught to have pride in her culture, and to "Never
Forget.
From the passion with which she approaches her career, one would never guess at
the circuitous path that brought her to it. Lori was a first-generation college
student. She always liked math and took AP Calculus in high school, but in her
freshman year of college she found herself one of only three females in a
Calculus 3 class of more than one hundred students. Because of this experience,
she went into science instead, and graduated from the University of Wisconsin
with a BS degree in Kinesiology. After two years working as an Aquatics Director
at a Jewish community center in Illinois, Lori joined the Peace Corps because
she wanted to have a positive influence on people. So from May 1997 to September
1999, she volunteered in the Republic of
Moldova, a formerly Soviet country between Romania and Ukraine. Her primary
assignment was to teach health education to junior high, high school, and
college students, which sparked her interest in public health on a community
level. With another Peace Corps volunteer, Lori also started Camp GLOW (Girls
Leading Our World), a week-long summer camp for girls. One of the things they
taught the girls was self-defense, and at the end of the camp, one of the girls
told Lori, "Thank you, I didn't know you could defend yourself." Lori cherishes
this memory and maintains that joining the Peace Corps was, and still is, the
best decision she has ever made.
Back in the States after her rewarding experience in Moldova, Lori pursued
graduate study in Epidemiology at Boston University. She soon realized, however,
that she preferred the biostatistics part of the program, and got her MPH in
Biostatistics and International Health. She worked as a project manager for a
year, and once she got her hands on real data she knew that she wanted to
continue on, and joined the PhD program at Boston University. Now she is working
on predictive
accuracy markers in logistic data. Predictive accuracy measures include True
Positive Rates and False Positive Rates, which can be applied to pre-natal
testing for Downs Syndrome, for example. At Brigham and Women's Hospital, Lori
works in the department of Rheumatology, where she does everything from writing
grants to doing statistical analysis and writing papers. She has gotten three
papers published so far this year, and another three are in the works.
A crucial part of any biostatistician's job is working with different types
of people. At the Hospital, Lori works with MDs, PhDs, MPHs, students, and
research assistants, who each specialize in different areas of medicine and
approach problems from different perspectives.
This is a great opportunity to learn something different every day,
and Lori loves it. She also loves teaching Statistics 1, which she
calls "Statistics for people who hate math," to university students.
According to Lori, statistics "isn't about equations and plugging in
numbers. It's about trying to understand what the numbers are telling
you." Her goal in teaching is to get her students to look at the world
in a more skeptical way. Instead of believing everything in the news,
for example, she wants them to look at the studies and form their own
opinions.
Lori is not afraid of having her own opinion, and expressing it too.
She is one of the most outspoken and intelligent women I have ever
met, and she has a genuine desire to make the world a healthier place
through her work as a biostatistician. During the SIBS program last
summer, we watched "And the Band Played On," a truly inspiring
movie about the discovery of the AIDS epidemic. In the discussion
that followed, Lori's passion for teaching and public health issues
shone through. I feel lucky to have met a woman such as Lori, who
both loves and believes in what she does for a living. She has walked
a long way, and she is not slowing down anytime soon.
About the Student:
I am a math major at Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota.
Coincidentally, I first got interested in mathematics by reading a
book of biographies of modern mathematicians, some of them women, who
have remained among my role models. Last summer I attended the Summer
Institute for Training in Biostatistics at Boston University and met
many amazing professionals in the field. I am very interested in the
intersection between math and biology, and plan to go to graduate
school in applied math. In my spare time, I enjoy participating in
environmentalism on campus, playing the erhu, and learning to play Go.
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