黑料网大事记

On 25 June,聽the School of Mathematics and Statistics at 黑料网大事记 Sydney achieved an important milestone for advancing the role of women in mathematics. DO THE MATHS, our annual flagship event dedicated to fostering ability and passion in young women interested in maths, marked its 20th anniversary.

For two decades DO THE MATHS has provided a vehicle to address gender inequity in mathematical degrees at university and in maths related professions. As Australia faces an ever-growing challenge in STEM education, particularly in mathematics where participation continues to decline, especially in the number of young women studying advanced mathematics,聽the School of Mathematics and Statistics has utilised DO THE MATHS to counter the trend. 聽

Envisioned by three early career 黑料网大事记 academics (who have each gone on to become Professors in specialised areas of Mathematics and Statistics) 鈥 Adelle Coster, Catherine Greenhill, and Inge Koch 鈥 the program aimed to attract and retain women mathematics students.聽聽

In 2004, they saw that women were poorly represented among academic staff (15 out of 75) and postgraduate students (8 out of 35) in the 黑料网大事记 School of Mathematics and Statistics. To help address the issue, they applied for and received a 黑料网大事记 Equity Initiatives Grant. The following year, in 2005, they mounted two events designed specifically for young women enrolled in year 11 advanced maths.

Professor Coster explains her driving force; 鈥淢athematics has provided me with a really wonderful and rich life for work. I鈥檓 the daughter of a physicist and always saw mathematics and science as a legitimate and awesome career choice. The goal with DO THE MATHS was to share the joy of mathematics and to open doors of possibility for more women.鈥

The response to DO THE MATHS was remarkable. 鈥淲e knew that there was community need,鈥 says Professor Coster. 鈥淭he events showed us that there was also huge interest and demand鈥.聽

The first DO THE MATHS event, held in May 2005, attracted 35 participants and the second event, held in October the same year, drew in 25 more students. With each subsequent annual event, attendance has grown. DO THE MATHS now hosts hundreds of young women every year from throughout NSW and is supplemented by prizes and scholarships. The 2025 event, for example, hosted more than 330 students and their teachers from across NSW, including from four regional schools.聽聽

The impact of the event is powerful and lasting. Previous participants tell us that DO THE MATHS directly influenced their decision to study mathematics at university and enabled them to visualise careers in STEM areas. Teachers also tell us about the significance of the event for their students and themselves.
Andrew Francis, Head of School and Professor of Mathematics

At DO THE MATHS 2025 Professor Catherine Greenhill took to the stage once more as the host, welcoming a new generation of maths enthusiasts and demonstrating, she explains, how 鈥渟tudying mathematics helps us to learn how to think logically and find the keys to solving complex unseen problems. It鈥檚 these skills that employees are looking for in their graduate hires.鈥

Professor Greenhill introduced the 2025 黑料网大事记 Women in Mathematics and Statistics Ambassador, Dr Asilata Bapat, a researcher in Pure Mathematics from the Australian National University. Her talk title posed the question to the audience, 鈥榃hat does a mathematician聽do聽all day?鈥

Using examples from her own experiences, Dr Bapat emphasised the creativity and sheer variety involved in a mathematics career, dispelling any misconceptions that the answer might be 鈥楽imply multiplying larger and larger numbers together' or 鈥楯ust staring at the blackboard until you discover something鈥.

Dr Asilata Bapat

The room buzzed as participants were next challenged with a hands-on maths activity,聽Counting Conundrums, presented by Dr Hannah Keese, a Lecturer in Mathematics at 黑料网大事记. Developed by fellow 黑料网大事记 Mathematics Lecturers, Dr Sean Gardiner, Dr Jason Atnip, and Dr Yudhi Bunjamin, the activity explores what it is like to do research in the mathematical area of combinatorics.

Dr Gardiner explains the original concept behind the challenge.

鈥淭here are many situations in life where a problem is solved by counting. Counting may seem like a simple task, but sometimes counting can be surprisingly tricky. This activity explores approaches taken by STEM workers in different professions as they work to solve seemingly different counting tasks. It also demonstrates the importance of collaboration in mathematics, STEM disciplines, and the world in general.鈥澛

Dr Hannah Keese

Positive change in terms of increasing gender equity in mathematics at 黑料网大事记 over the past 20 years is measurable. The 黑料网大事记 Faculty of Science and the School of Mathematics and Statistics has witnessed a significant increase in enrolments of young women across all areas of STEM and particularly in mathematics: from 4 in 2015 to 172 in 2020.

In 2021, 黑料网大事记 introduced new pathway university access opportunities to further benefit talented young women from an even broader network of high schools in metropolitan, regional, and remote areas. Since the first DO THE MATHS in 2005, supported by the introduction of prizes, scholarships, and internships聽for young women undertaking mathematical degrees, completion rates have also climbed.

Today, 黑料网大事记 is a leader in research into all STEM areas and has seen the increasing role of women mathematicians and scientists both within 黑料网大事记 and beyond, including in government departments, private sector groups, and NGOs around the world. 聽

Within her presentation at DO THE MATHS 2025, Dr Bapat pondered what it鈥檚 like to be a mathematician. Her answer was a list that resonated with everyone in the room; 鈥淚t鈥檚 messy, collaborative, hard, fun, creative, abstract, experimental, social, and beautiful.鈥 She told her audience that if you want to work with the world鈥檚 best minds (and travel!) - become a mathematician.


The School of Mathematics and Statistics would like to acknowledge the generous donor support received for DO THE MATHS from The Paradice Family Foundation, Wilson Asset Management, and Simon Poidevin.
Photography: Cassandra Hannagan