Jump to content

Jane Purcell Coffee

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is the current revision of this page, as edited by Citation bot (talk | contribs) at 00:51, 6 June 2024 (Added date. | Use this bot. Report bugs. | Suggested by Abductive | Category:Use list-defined references from May 2024 | #UCB_Category 1/90). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.

(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)

Jane C. Purcell Coffee (1944–2022) was an American mathematician, one of the first women to earn a doctorate in mathematics at the University of Pennsylvania, and the founder of the Teacher Education Honors Academy at the College of Staten Island.[1]

Early life and education

[edit]

Coffee was the daughter of James Purcell, a civil engineer and Democratic Party politician, who died when she was young. She was born in Meriden, Connecticut in 1944, and became the valedictorian of O.H. Platt High School in Meriden. She attended Smith College on a scholarship,[2] where mathematics professor Neal McCoy became a faculty mentor.[3] There, she met her future husband, legal scholar John C. Coffee Jr., a student at Amherst College.[2] She graduated from Smith in 1966.[3]

Next, she went to the University of Pennsylvania for graduate study in mathematics, while John Coffee studied law at Yale University. She persisted as "one of the first women in her PhD program" despite facing discriminatory practices such as segregating her with the mathematicians' wives at regular gatherings where the male mathematicians in the department would discuss their research.[2] She completed her Ph.D. in 1970, with a thesis on abstract algebra, A Condition for a Filtered Ring to be Isomorphic to its Associated Graded Ring, supervised by Murray Gerstenhaber.[4]

Career and later life

[edit]

In order to avoid hiring discrimination, Coffee applied to faculty positions using only her first initial, "J.". This led to a job offer at Richmond College, which later became the College of Staten Island,[2] and she began working there in 1970.[3]

During this time, she lived with her husband in Maplewood, New Jersey, commuting to their jobs in Staten Island and in New York City, respectively. Their daughter, Megan Coffee[2] (now a medical researcher at Columbia University)[5] was born in 1976. In the late 1970s, Coffee took a new faculty position, at the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland, at about the same time as her husband became a professor at Georgetown University in Washington, DC. As child care, she sat her daughter at the back of her classroom at the academy.[2]

After this, Coffee returned to the College of Staten Island, as chair of mathematics, and her husband moved to Columbia University. An incident from this time spurred her creation of the college's Teacher Education Honors Academy: she met a woman on a train who freely confessed her innumeracy, only to discover later that the same woman was a teacher at her daughter's elementary school. The academy aimed at improving that situation by preparing college students for a career as a secondary school STEM educator.[2]

She died on September 23, 2022.[1][2][3]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Jane Purcell Coffee (1944–2022)", News from the AMS, American Mathematical Society, 4 October 2022, retrieved 2024-05-12
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Newhouse, Nora Tree (13 October 2022), "Life Stories: A math prodigy, she overcame gender discrimination and created a math/science teacher academy at CSI. Jane Coffee dies at 78.", Staten Island Advance, archived from the original on 2023-03-02
  3. ^ a b c d "Obituaries", Smith Alumni Quarterly, p. 87, Winter 2023
  4. ^ Jane Purcell Coffee at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  5. ^ Megan Coffee, MD, PhD, Assistant Professor of Population and Family Health, Columbia Mailman School of Public Health, December 2022, retrieved 2024-05-12
[edit]