Kathleen M. Shannon
go to the Mathematical Sciences Home Page E-mail me?    Department of Mathematical Sciences
Richard A. Henson School of Science and Technology
Salisbury University
Salisbury, MD 21801

Welcome to Kathleen Shannon's web, a collection of sites to support my teaching, research, service and other interests. If you are interested in mathematical patterns; cellular automata; computer graphics; visualization of abstract concepts, in particular abstract algebra; Pascal's triangle; tilings; or just neat pictures, try the PascGalois Project link. If you are interested in courses, syllabi, assignments, etc. or college level mathematics instruction in general, try the courses link. Otherwise, feel free to just browse . . .

Did you notice when google became a verb?

My Courses The PascGalois Project Faculty Senate
Mathematical Association of America Mathematics Tutors Center for Applied Mathematics and Science
Vita
Links to sites of mathematical interest

     Phone: (410)543-6476 Fax: (410)548-5559

Office: Devilbiss Hall Room 104
I check e-mail regularly  at kmshannon - at - salisbury.edu

or you can call the department's Program Management Specialist at (410) 543-6471.

For more ideas on how to contact me, check out my schedule.
Would you like to see my Niece and Nephews? 

Personal Data

Education:

Ph.D. in applied mathematics from Brown University awarded May, 1985
M.Sc. in applied mathematics from Brown University awarded June, 1981
B.A. in mathematics and physics from the College of the Holy Cross May, 1980
Major area for doctoral qualifying exams: numerical analysis, numerical methods of solving differential equations, approximation and interpolation.
Minor Areas: real analysis and Hilbert spaces, classical and modern control systems.

Thesis area: convex sets and the geometry of computation. Some relationships between planar convex sets and their support functions are explored. In particular, a limit of Lemoine processes leading to the Steiner Point is presented and generalized to non-convex sets and collections of lines.

Thesis advisor: P.J. Davis, Ph.D., Brown University

Current Position at Salisbury University:

Professor of Mathematics: 1999 - present

Full C.V.

Copyright 1997 K.M.Shannon all rights reserved.