In the Spring of 1997, the Canadian Mathematical
Society (CMS) created a Committee for WMY 2000, with a mandate to develop
proposals for events during the year 2000 to make mathematics more visible in
Canada. It was suggested that these events should be noticeably different from
standard CMS activities, should recognize the diversity of mathematics and
mathematical interests in Canada and should be imaginative, while recognizing
the three aims of the IMU in its Declaration of Rio de Janeiro. Chaired by
Bernard R. Hodgson, Université', Laval (current Secretary of ICMI), this
Committee met at several physical locations as well as electronically, gathered
suggestions from across Canada, and submitted its report in September 1998. The CMS has now committed $50,000 to these WMY 2000 proposals.
In addition to the CMS initiative, other Canadian mathematical societies and
institutes have proposed activities to celebrate WMY 2000. This report presents
highlights of these exciting events now being planned in Canada for WMY 2000.
In celebration of the World Mathematical Year, the CMS and CAIMS (Canadian Applied and Industrial Mathematics Society) have agreed to meet together for the first time, in a joint annual meeting, June 10-14, 2000 in Hamilton, Ontario. These two societies will be joined by the Canadian Operations Research Society, the Canadian Society for the History and Philosophy of Mathematics, the Canadian Symposium on Fluid Dynamics and the Canadian Undergraduate Mathematics Conference. This Year 2000 joint societies meeting is expected to bring together the largest number of Canadian mathematical scientists, from across Canada, ever assembled in one place. It is itself an historic event for Canada. Mathematicians from around the world are welcome to join this celebration; program information will be available soon at the web-site http://www.math.ca/ .
Closely coordinated with this joint societies meeting
in June 2000, the Fields Institute will host a Symposium on the Legacy of John
Charles Fields, at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto, June 7-9, 2000. This
Symposium is supported also by the CMS, CAIMS, Centre de recherches
mathématiques
and the Pacific Institute for Mathematical Sciences. It will help to inform all
Canadians of our unsung hero in the mathematical sciences, the visionary John
Charles Fields and his exceptional legacy to the world of mathematics. He
established the world's highest award for achievement in mathematics, now known
internationally as the Fields Medal (and often referred to as the "Nobel
Prize of Mathematics"). It is struck by the Canadian Mint, of Canadian
gold, and shows the head of the ancient Greek mathematician Archimedes on the
face. A scientific highlight of the Symposium will be presentations by Fields
Medal winners of their medal- winning work and its impact on modern mathematics.
Sir Michael Atiyah will deliver the Banquet Address on Friday evening. Professor
Tom Archibald of Acadia University will give a plenary lecture on the life and
times of John Charles Fields. As well as raising awareness of mathematics in
Canada, this Symposium will be a significant retrospective contribution to World
Mathematical Year 2000. Negotiations are underway to produce a documentary video
and book, as a lasting record of this unique event.
In Montreal, Operation Métro-2000 is being organized
under the leadership of Christiane Rousseau, with support from CRM and CMS and
other sources. This initiative will place posters in the Montreal subway system,
designed to raise the awareness of the general public and particularly students
of the importance and omnipresence of mathematics in the sciences and
technology. It is part of a world-wide strategy of WMY-2000 to bring mathematics
to the people, through posters in public places, such as subways. The Montreal
posters will be strategically located in subway cars and those stations most
frequented by students. The possibility is being explored of extending this
effort to Toronto and other cities.
In Western Canada, the WMY-2000 Museum of Mathematics
Project will bring the highly acclaimed travelling public exhibition of
mathematics, or Mathematiksmuseum to visit the Winnipeg Children's Museum, May 1
to 13, 2000, and the Saskatchewan Science Centre in Regina, May 15 to 27, 2000. The
Mathematiksmuseum was developed in Germany by Professor Albrecht Beutelspacher
of Justus-Liebig Universität, Giessen, and was shown during the International
Congress of Mathematics in Berlin in 1998.
The Pacific Institute for the Mathematical Sciences
(PIMS) will substantially increase its activities to promote mathematics
awareness, by holding public lectures, presentations, and hands-on workshops. A
number of different events to be held in British Columbia and Alberta elementary
schools focussing on presenting "fun" methods for doing math and
computer science with children and their parents. Activity examples include soap
bubbles, geometry and paper, probability experiments using pennies, and building
geometric models from straw and paper. A Conference on Changing the Culture for
the Next Millennium is designed to forge closer ties between the mathematics
community, mathematics teachers, and industry. Featured talks and small group
discussions focus on erasing barriers between these various communities. In a
Mathematics is Everywhere campaign, like the Operation Métro-2000 in Montreal,
PIMS will place posters on all components of public transportation systems in BC
and Alberta, designed to raise the awareness of the general public and
particularly students of the importance and omnipresence of mathematics in the
sciences and technology. In response to the Video Lottery Terminal debate in the
Province of Alberta, PIMS representatives met with officials from the Edmonton
Science Center to set up an interactive exhibit on chance and probability. The
inauguration will happen in year 2000.
The activities described here are only a part of the
local, national and international activities planned in celebration of World
Mathematical Year 2000. The Canadian Mathematical Society for example will
sponsor, in addition to the activities described in this proposal, Math Camps, a
Virtual Canadian Math Trail, a Women in Math Poster and Mathematics Museum
Exhibits. Across Canada, there will be additional public exhibitions and
celebrations of mathematics, complementary to those described here, under the
auspices of the CMS, CRM, l'Association mathématique du Québec (AMQ), the
Ontario Association for Mathematics Education (OAME) and other sponsors.