Godfrey T. Vincent, Ph.D
Assistant Professor, History
College of Arts and Sciences
Department of History and Political Science
Email: gvincent@mytu.tuskegee.edu
Office Phone: 334-727-8105
Office Address: John A. Kenney Hall
Room 70-106
1200 West Montgomery Road
Tuskegee, Alabama 36088
Biographical Sketch:
Professor Godfrey Vincent received his Ph.D from Morgan State University, Baltimore, Maryland in 2011. His current research focuses on Neo-liberal Globalization. Addressing the issues of income inequality in the Global South, exploitation of resources, and governance, Dr. Vincent’s group is currently developing alternative models of development that seeks to address all forms of disparities.
Representative Publications:
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Vincent, Godfrey. Review of Politics of Identity in Small Plural Societies: Guyana, Fiji Islands, Trinidad and Tobago by Stacey-Ann Wilson. WorkingUSA: The Journal of Labor and Society, Vol. 15, No. 3 (Sept., 2012) : 460-465.
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Vincent, Godfrey. “The Oilfields Workers’ Trade Union, Trinidad and Tobago (1937- ).” The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest. Ness, Immanuel (ed). Blackwell Online. May 23 2012. http://www.revolutionaryprotestencyclopedia.com/subscriber/tocnode?id=g9781405184649_yr2012_chunk_g97814051846491844
Vincent, Godfrey. Review of Eric Williams and the Making of the Modern Caribbean by Colin A. Palmer. Journal of International Working Class History, 71, Issue 01 (2007) : 22
Mathematics
AJI
Research Fields:
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Applied Mathematics
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Numerical Analysis
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Mathematics Education
Collaborations:
President of Tuskegee University
Department of Mathematics
Auburn University, Auburn, AL
Department of Computer Science
Auburn University
Biographical Sketch:
Chadia Affane Aji, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, Mathematics
College of Arts & Sciences
E-mail: affane@mytu.tuskegee.edu
Office Phone: 334-725-2358
Office Address: Kenney Hall 70-356
Department of Mathematics
Tuskegee University
Tuskegee, AL 36088
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Dr. Chadia Affane Aji received her Ph.D. and M.S. in Mathematics from Auburn University and a Bachelor in Chemical Engineering from Texas A&M University. Her research interests
lie in the areas of numerical analysis, computational applied mathematics, nonlinear partial differential equations, complex analysis, and on improving students’ learning in STEM disciplines. Dr. Aji is involved in retention activities at Tuskegee University. In particular, she works closely with sources on campus to design strategies to assist incoming freshmen cope with first year mathematics classes. She developed teaching modules to improve students’ learning in mathematics using technology. Dr. Aji has also been a principle investigator or co-principle investigator on numerous interesting and engaging NSF projects. She served on various NSF and DoD panels.
Representative Publications:
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C. Affane-Aji, N. K. Govil, “On the Region Containing All the Zeros of a Polynomial,” Chapter book in Nonlinear Analysis. Springer Optimization and its Applications, 2012, Volume 68, 39-55, DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4614-3498-6_3
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C. Affane, S. Biaz, N. K. Govil, “On Annuli Containing All the Zeros of a Polynomial,” Mathematical and Computer Modeling, 2010, 52 (9-10): 1532-1537
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C. Affane-Aji, H. Elalaoui-Talibi, “A
Partitioning Algorithm for Computing Limiting Distributions of Ill-Conditioned Markov Chains,” Advances and Applications Statistical Sciences (AASS), 2010, No. 2, 511-519
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C. Affane, Saad Biaz, S. Elnashai, F. Uhlig, “A Geometric Level Set Method for Transcendental Equations from Chemical Engineering,” The Alabama Journal of Mathematics, 2009, 1-7.
John W. Bales, Ph.D.
Professor, Mathematics
College of Arts and Scieces
Email: jbales@mytu.tuskegee.edu
Office Phone: 334-724-4217
Office Address: Department of Mathematics
College of Arts and Sciences
Tuskegee University
1200 Montgomery Road
Tuskegee Institute, AL 36088
Mathematics
BALES
Research Fields:
Sponsored Research:
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NASA Marshall Spaceflight Center Summers 1994-95
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Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, Summer 1997
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Oak Ridge National Laboratory-High Performance Computing, Summer 1998
Biographical Sketch:
Professor John Bales received his PhD from Auburn University in 1975. His current interests are web-based mathematics instruction and twisted group algebras-in particular, Cayley-Dickson algebras and Clifford algebras.
Representative Publications:
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Precalculus Tutorial (2000) http://jbales.us/precal/index.html
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Bales, John W. “Cayley-Dickson and Clifford algebras as twisted group algebras” arXiv:1108.1375 (2003)
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Bales, John W. “Applications of synthetic division” Alabama Journal of Math. Vol 35 (2010)
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Bales, John W. “A catalog of Cayley-Dickson-like products” arXiv:1107:1301 (2011).
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