2004 Essay Contest
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Biographies of Women in Math
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2004 AWM Essay Contest:
Honorable Mention in the College Category
My Teacher, My Mentor: Mrs. S.*
By Tzipora Henig
"My name is Mrs. S., and I am a witch." That was my
introduction to my eleventh grade math teacher. She stood at the
front of the classroom, eyeing all the students sternly, and then
proceeded to teach. At the end of our first class, she assigned
homework. At the beginning of our second class, she gave us a
surprise quiz. I was terrified of her.
But as the year progressed, I began to see past the "witch" exterior
she had built up and got to know an amazing individual who sincerely
cares about each of her students and does everything in her power to
help them succeed. I grew close to her by calling her with my math
questions and talking to her about unrelated subjects; I grew even
closer by ending off each week with a hug from her. She would say,
"Tzipora, if I was teaching in a public school, they would fire me for
hugging a student!" but I wouldn't miss my Friday hug for anything. I
came to think of her as my grandmother; in fact, she reminds me of my
biological grandmother: tall, stately, still beautiful despite her
age, stern but loving, demanding but also forgiving. Math became the
highlight of my week and my favorite subject while Mrs. S.
became my favorite teacher and mentor. And when I learned about her
life story, she became my biggest inspiration to try hard and succeed.
Mrs. S. was born in Romania just after the beginning of the
Second World War. After graduating high school, she went on to get
her Masters degree at the University of Romania as a chemical analyst.
At the age of 24, she was ready to begin working in her field as a
chemical analyst, but her father didn't allow her to pursue it because
the only job available was too far from home. Instead, she got a job
teaching high school chemistry and French.
Soon afterwards, she got married and moved to Israel with her husband.
Once again, she couldn't find a job in her field, because Israel
didn't want female chemists at the time. What she did find was a job
at an all-boys' technical high school in Haifa, teaching mathematics
and physics. She only had two problems with this: she didn't speak
any Hebrew, and she wasn't very well educated in math. She had
dropped out of high school mathematics because of the animosity
directed towards her by her anti-Semitic math teacher. Instead of
math, she had taken Latin. In order to be accepted to university, she
had taken a summer mathematics course and passed it - barely. As
well, she had learned some math while getting her degree in chemistry.
However, now she would have to teach the subject . . . and in a
foreign language!
But she managed, because she had to manage. She wrote out all of her
classes in Hebrew, memorized them, and taught that way. "If someone
would interrupt me to ask a question," she told me, "I would have to
restart from the beginning of my sentence because that's the way I had
the lessons memorized." She recited her lessons that first year in
algebra, trigonometry, physics, and eventually chemistry, while
learning Hebrew and math from her students. "They were brilliant
boys," she said, "and they taught me the math!" She taught in Israel
for two and a half years before coming to Canada.
Once she reached Canada, she was faced with a similar dilemma as
before: although she now had a math education, she didn't speak the
language. So, when she got a job at Beth Jacob High School teaching
mathematics, physics, chemistry, and science to all grades, she again
wrote out her classes and memorized them. And it wasn't easy. "I
cried every night," she confessed to me. "I watched 'Bugs Bunny' and
didn't understand a word and I cried because I couldn't even
understand 'Bugs Bunny!'" But she worked hard, and she learned. And
42 years later, she's still teaching in the same high school and her
English is better than that of most of her students.
As I listened to Mrs. S. in our interview, I was astounded by
her accomplishments. Besides her education at the University of
Romania, she also studied in Israel to round out her knowledge in
mathematics, physics, and chemistry. Upon coming to Canada, she took
courses from the Ontario College of Education to get a teaching
degree. She still takes math courses every summer to update her
knowledge. "My mind is mathematically inclined; I love the subject,"
she said. In fact, anything that uses the mind interests her.
Referring to the brain, she used to tell us students, "If you don't
use it, you lose it." In her spare time, she does crossword puzzles
or "The Moscow Puzzles." She gave me a copy of "The Moscow Puzzles"
as a gift and told me not to look at the answers in the back of the
book. Who needs the back of the book anyway? I'll just call her if I
can't work them out on my own.
When I asked Mrs. S. what advice she has to give to students
interested in a career in mathematics, she told me the following. "If
a student is gifted in this area, he or she should definitely pursue a
career in the field. It is a very rewarding job and I love it." But
she loves more than her job; she loves her students and does her best
to give them what they need to succeed in life. Eleventh grade
mathematics taught me so much more than just trigonometry. It taught
me that I can succeed, because someone believes in me; I can climb
high, because someone showed me how to pick myself up if I fall; I can
do whatever I set my mind to, because someone told me that I can. And
that someone is Mrs. S.
About the student:
My name is Tzipora Henig and I am nineteen years old. I
am currently doing an expanded major in Applied Mathematics at the
University of Bar-Ilan in Israel. Since being introduced to geometry
in eighth grade, I have loved math. I now want to get a degree in the
subject so that I can go on to teach high school age children the
beauty in mathematics that I see. I want to open up a world to the
them the way it was opened to me.
* Name changed at request of interviewee.
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