
Image Source: Center for Academic Program Support
One of only about 12 Native Americans who holds a Ph.D. in mathematics, Robert Megginson grew up in a family interested in math. His British father held a bachelor’s degree in physics and math, and his maternal grandfather, an Oglala Lakota, often gave the young Megginson math problems to solve.
However, math was not Megginson’s first degree. He received his bachelor’s degree in physics and worked eight years as a computer systems software specialist for a private firm. In 1977, he returned to college and received his master’s degree in statistics and his doctorate in mathematics from the University of Illinois. Dr. Megginson then joined the faculty of Eastern Illinois University and later the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. His field of study is the study of multi-dimensional (Banach) spaces.
For the past decade, Dr. Megginson has worked to solve the problem of minorities’ underrepresentation in mathematics. In 1992, he developed a summer program for high school students at the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation in North Dakota. The program’s purpose is to keep the students interested in mathematics and related fields and encourage them to pursue college degrees in these areas.
Dr. Megginson has mentored many minority students and, in 1997, received the U.S. Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics, and Engineering Mentoring. In 1999, the American Indian Science and Engineering Society awarded Megginson its Ely S. Parker Lifetime Achievement Award. In 2001, he was named one of the Native American Science and Engineering Wall of Famers. He continues to live and teach in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
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