@adviceseeker:
I sent you a PM. I am very familiar with IU and PU, as well as their diamond-in-the-rough cousin, IUPUI.
Hi - this thread touches on exactly what I'm cruising the internet trying to figure out. I'm a mom with two sons who want to major in math and go on to a PhD program. One is a college freshman now and the other is a high school junior, so I really have two sets of questions.
1. My older son is a freshman at Univ of Rochester. He is in the honors sequence, which starts with Calc I (using Spivak) and has 4 semesters in sequence - even for students who had Calc in high school. He's not sure if he should sign up for other high level classes until he's finished those 4 core classes (this sequence includes a Calculus series and Linear Algebra). Students there have a general adviser until they officially declare a major at the end of sophomore year, so he is planning to seek out the advice of a math prof even though he doesn't have an adviser in the math department yet. He's planning on a physics minor and taking a lot more math classes than required for the math degree. Also, he plans to get the BA with honors which requires at least 2 grad level courses.
Question 1 - do you have any experience with undergrads from University of Rochester, and do you have an opinion on whether it will prepare him well for a Phd program?
Question 2 - he would love to find a program to participate in for the summer and he's found a bunch online that even include stipends, but most require him to have completed sophomore year or Linear Alg, neither of which he will have done yet for summer of 2011. Any suggestions on programs he should look into for a student the summer after freshman year who will have had proof based Calc I & II, Mathematical Logic (he loves Logic so far) and a Statistics class by the time summer rolls around? He has a great GPA so far if that helps.
2. My high school junior is starting to look for colleges. We are in Indiana, so our state schools include Purdue and IU. He says he's more interested in pure math than applied. He'd love to go to a smaller school somewhere if it has a good program and he can afford it (which means getting aid). This is a student who is really good at math and loves it. We didn't become aware of extra things to do outside of school (AMC, other contests) until recently and he doesn't have a straight A GPA, so I think some of the top notch schools you've mentioned in this thread are probably not in the running for him. He'll be taking the AMC 12 this year, but I have no idea how he'll do on it - he thinks he'll do well just having prepped at home. Despite the lack of extra things that prove he's good at math, for the sake of this discussion, maybe you can make undergrad suggestions based on the assumption that he really is talented in math, has A-'s and B+'s in math classes only because he doesn't always hand in homework but gets the top score on most tests given in the class. He scored 800 in math for SAT and SAT II. He hasn't had much formal help in learning math beyond the classroom, but sits around looking at math books a local prof loaned him and getting excited about what he learns in them. He's taking Calc BC now and Multivariable next year as a senior.
Question 1: So - any suggestions for schools that will give him a great undergrad math education? I'm assuming he won't get into Yale, Harvey Mudd, etc., but one of you mentioned this earlier - I know there must be great math programs out there that don't exactly have the name recognition of some of these other schools, and I don't know how to find them.
Question 2: Any ideas about what he can do to increase the chance of being accepted to a great math program between now (2nd semester Junior year) and next fall? I've recently started looking at summer programs but he has a great summer job that he loves and is very good at, and he needs the money from it. We would consider a summer program if it would really open up his world, but not JUST to pad a resume.
Thanks -