Patricia D. Shure
{{short description|American mathematics educator}}
Patricia D. Shure is an American mathematics educator. With Morton Brown and B. Alan Taylor, she is known for developing "Michigan calculus", a style of teaching calculus and combining cooperative real-world problem solving by the students with an instructional focus on conceptual understanding.{{r|memoir|michcalc|funny}} She is a senior lecturer emerita of mathematics at the University of Michigan, where she taught from 1982 until her retirement in 2006.{{r|memoir}}
Education and career
Shure did both her undergraduate and graduate studies at the University of Michigan, earning a bachelor's degree in 1958 and a master's degree in 1960. After working as a secondary school teacher for two decades, she returned to Michigan in 1982 as coordinator for mathematics and science in the Coalition for the Use of Learning Skills. She also became a lecturer in mathematics, and later a senior lecturer.{{r|memoir}}
Mathematics education
At Michigan, she played a key role not just in teaching mathematics, but in training the other instructors and graduate students there to be good teachers of mathematics.{{r|hay}} Her work on calculus reform began in 1992;{{r|memoir}} it was based in part on the "Harvard calculus" project led by Andrew M. Gleason, and her instructor training materials have been widely used at other universities.{{r|hay}} With Gleason and others, she became the author of a widely used precalculus textbook, Functions Modeling Change: A Preparation for Calculus (Wiley, 2000; 5th ed., 2017).{{r|memoir|ruane}} The program she initiated at Michigan continues in successful use there.{{r|michcalc}}
Recognition
In 2001 the Association for Women in Mathematics gave Shure their Louise Hay Award for her contributions to mathematics education.{{r|hay}} In the same year she became the AWM/MAA Falconer Lecturer, speaking on "The Scholarship of Learning and Teaching: A Look Back and a Look Ahead".{{r|falconer}}
References
{{reflist|refs=
{{citation|url=https://sites.google.com/site/awmmath/programs/falconer-lectures/past-recipients|title=Past Falconer Lecturers|publisher=Association for Women in Mathematics|access-date=2018-04-29}}
{{citation|url=http://www.awm-math.org/hayaward/2001.html|title=11th Louise Hay Award: Patricia D. Shure|publisher=Association for Women in Mathematics|access-date=2018-04-29}}. Reprinted in {{citation|url=https://www.ams.org/notices/200105/comm-awm.pdf|journal=Notices of the American Mathematical Society|title=AWM Awards Presented in New Orleans|page=509|date=May 2001|volume=48|issue=5}}
{{citation|url=https://www.lib.umich.edu/faculty-history/faculty/patricia-d-shure/memoir|title=Memoir: Patricia D. Shure|work=Faculty History Project|publisher=University of Michigan|author=The Regents of the University of Michigan|access-date=2018-04-29}}
| last1 = Carreon | first1 = Fernando
| last2 = DeBacker | first2 = Stephen
| last3 = Kessenich | first3 = Paul
| last4 = Kubena | first4 = Angela
| last5 = LaRose | first5 = P. Gavin
| date = June 2017
| doi = 10.1080/10511970.2017.1315474
| journal = PRIMUS
| volume = 28
| issue = 6
| pages = 476–507
| title = What is old is new again: A systemic approach to the challenges of calculus instruction| s2cid = 125720077
}}
{{citation|title=Review of Functions Modeling Change: A Preparation for Calculus (2nd ed., 2004)|first=P. N.|last=Ruane|work=MAA Reviews|publisher=Mathematical Association of America|date=June 2005|url=https://www.maa.org/press/maa-reviews/functions-modeling-change-a-preparation-for-calculus-0}}
}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Shure, Patricia D.}}
Category:Year of birth missing (living people)
Category:20th-century American mathematicians
Category:American mathematics educators
Category:University of Michigan alumni
Category:University of Michigan faculty
Category:21st-century American mathematicians