Christina Eubanks-Turner is a professor of mathematics in the Seaver College of Science and Engineering at
Loyola Marymount University (LMU). Her academic areas of interest include graph theory, commutative algebra, mathematics education, and mathematical sciences diversification. She is also the Director of the Master's Program in Teaching Mathematics at LMU.[1]
Early life and education
Eubanks-Turner was born and raised in
New Orleans, Louisiana and enjoyed logic puzzles and creative thinking as a child.[2][3] She received her B.S. cum laude from
Xavier University of Louisiana, a
historically black college, in 2002; she received her M.S. in 2004 and her Ph.D. in 2008—both from the
University of Nebraska-Lincoln.[2] Eubanks-Turner was one of the first two African Americans to receive a doctorate degree in mathematics from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.[4][5] Her dissertation explored the topic of "Prime ideals in low-dimensional mixed polynomial/
power series rings."[6] Eubanks-Turner's doctoral advisor was
Sylvia Wiegand.[7]
Career and research
Eubanks-Turner was the first African American to receive tenure at LMU's College of Science and Engineering.[4]
Her research areas include specialized mathematical training that teachers need to teach math at the undergraduate and secondary levels.[1][8][9] Her pedagogy also includes the integration of equity issues[10] into teaching and an approach to mathematics education that addresses the whole student.[3] Her research in mathematics includes topics in
graph theory and
commutative algebra.[11]
Selected publications
C. Eubanks-Turner, A. Li, Interlace Polynomials of Friendship Graphs, Electronic Journal of Graph Theory and Applications, Vol. 6 (2), (2018), 269–281.[12]
D. Berube, C. Eubanks-Turner, E. Mosteig, T. Zachariah, A Tale of Two Programs: Broadening Participation of Underrepresented Students in STEM at Loyola Marymount University, Journal of Research in STEM Education, Vol. 4(1), (2018), 13–22.[13]
B. Baker Swart, K. Beck, S. Crook, C. Eubanks-Turner, H. Grundman, M. Mei, L. Zack, Fixed points of augmented generalized happy functions, Rocky Mountain Journal of Mathematics, Vol. 48(1), (2018), 47–58.[14]
C. Eubanks-Turner, P. Beaulieu, N. Pal, Smooth Transition for Advancement to Graduate Education (STAGE) for Underrepresented Groups in Mathematical Sciences Pilot Project: The Benefits and Challenges of Mentoring, PRIMUS, 28:2, (2018), 97–117.[9]
C. Eubanks-Turner, M. Lennon, E. Reynoso, B. Thibodeaux, A. Urquiza, A. Wheatley, D. Young, Using the Division Algorithm to Decode Reed-Solomon Codes, Journal of Shanghai Normal University (Natural Sciences) (2015), 44:3, 262–269.[15]
C. Eubanks-Turner, N. Hajj, Mardi Gras Math, Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School (2015), 20:8, 494–498.[16]
C. Eubanks-Turner, A. Li, Graphical Properties of the Bipartite Graph of Spec(Z[x])\{0}, Journal of Algebra Combinatorics, Discrete Structures and Applications (2015), 2:1, 65–73.[17]
E. Celikbas, C. Eubanks-Turner, S. Wiegand, Prime Ideals in Power Series Rings and Polynomial Rings over Noetherian Domains, Recent Advances in Commutative Rings, Integer-Valued Polynomials, and Polynomial Functions, Springer (2014), 55–82.[11]
Awards and honors
The
Mathematical Association of America (MAA) named Eubanks-Turner a Project NExT Fellow in June 2008.[18] In 2009, Eubanks-Turner was again honored by the MAA as a LA/MS Section Next Fellow.[19] In 2012, she received a $2 million
National Science Foundation research grant for a pilot program for the mentorship of undergraduates from underrepresented groups in mathematics.[9] Eubanks-Turner was also recognized by
Mathematically Gifted & Black as a Black History Month 2019 Honoree.[2]
Eubanks-Turner's 2018[9] paper, "Smooth Transition for Advancement to Graduation Education (STAGE) for Underrepresented Groups in the Mathematical Sciences Pilot Project: Broadening Participation through Mentoring", was honored as the PRIMUS 2018 Editor's Choice top paper.[20]
^
abJones, Shelly (2019). Women Who Count: Honoring African American Women Mathematicians. American Mathematical Society.
ISBN9781470448899.
^Henrich, Allison K.; Lawrence, Emille D.; Pons, Matthew A.; Taylor, David George, eds. (2019). Living proof : stories of resilience along the mathematical journey. American Mathematical Society.
ISBN978-1-4704-5281-0.
OCLC1097363982.
^
abCelikbas, Ela; Eubanks-Turner, Christina; Wiegand, Sylvia (2014), Fontana, Marco; Frisch, Sophie; Glaz, Sarah (eds.), "Prime Ideals in Polynomial and Power Series Rings over Noetherian Domains", Commutative Algebra, Springer New York, pp. 55–82,
doi:
10.1007/978-1-4939-0925-4_4,
ISBN978-1-4939-0924-7