Carolyn MorganCarolyn Bradshaw Morgan is an American statistician and applied mathematician, one of the first African-American undergraduates at Vanderbilt University, and the former chair of the mathematics department at Hampton University. Education and careerMorgan was born in Winston-Salem, North Carolina,[1] the oldest of three children of a single mother. She grew up going to segregated schools, but with integrated Advanced Placement classes and summer programs; she was her high school valedictorian. She became a student at Vanderbilt University, supported by a Rockefeller Scholarship.[2] She majored in mathematics,[1] and graduated in 1969 with her future husband, chemical engineer Morris Morgan.[3] Both were among the eight African-American undergraduate students first admitted when Vanderbilt desegregated in the mid-1960s.[2][3][4] Morgan continued for a master's degree in mathematics at Wright State University, and worked as a schoolteacher and as a computer programmer for General Motors before joining the General Electric research and development center in Schenectady, New York in 1973. While there, she completed a Ph.D. in administrative and engineering systems and statistics at Union College in Schenectady in 1982.[1] She continued to work for GE until 1996,[1] including participation in the development of the GE Profile dishwasher. From 1996 to 2007 she was chair of the mathematics department at Hampton University, a historically black university in Hampton, Virginia,[5] and continued afterwards as a professor of mathematics there.[3] RecognitionMorgan is a Fellow of the American Statistical Association, elected to the 1995 class of fellows.[1] References
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