2025-2026 Undergraduate Academic Catalogue 
    
    Jun 28, 2025  
2025-2026 Undergraduate Academic Catalogue

Mathematics and Statistics


Return to {$returnto_text} Return to: Loyola College of Arts and Sciences

Office: Knott Hall, Room 306
Telephone: 410‑617‑2328
Fax: 410‑617‑2803
Website: www.loyola.edu/academics/mathematics-statistics

Chair: Timothy B.P.Clark, Associate Professor

Professors: John C. Hennessey (emeritus); Michael P. Knapp; Christopher H. Morrell (emeritus); Jiyuan Tao; Anne L. Young (emerita)
Associate Professors: Prince Chidyagwai; Timothy B.P. Clark; William Ethan Duckworth; Bu Hyoung Lee; Lisa A. Oberbroeckling; William D. Reddy (emeritus); Dipa Sarkar Dey (emerita)
Assistant Professors: Richard E. Auer
Teaching Professors: Sudeshna Basu; Neeta Deshpande; Kevin Drummey; Glenn Georgieff; Anson Xuan; Amit Yavantikar
Affiliate Faculty: Alexander Bertram; Richard A. Brown; Anthony Calise; Brandon Myers; David Quinton-Schein; Stacy Reynolds; Leanne Voos; Stacy E. Wagaman

In keeping with the mission of Loyola University Maryland, the Department of Mathematics and Statistics strives for excellence in education. The department offers two majors: one in mathematics and one in statistics. The department's goal is to open students' minds to the power, beauty, and utility of mathematics and statistics and to develop their conceptual understanding, problem solving ability, and analytical thinking skills. The department's faculty is strongly committed to undergraduate teaching and to giving mathematics and statistics majors a solid and broad-based foundation for a variety of careers, as well as for graduate study. Faculty members conduct research in their fields of specialty and keep abreast of curricular reform and creative uses of technology.

A double major requires the student to complete the requirements of each major. Students cannot double major in mathematics and statistics. Interdisciplinary majors allow students to combine interests in two different disciplines. An interdisciplinary major may be designed with the assistance of the student's academic advisor.

Learning Aims

Students will be able to:

  • Calculate accurately using algebra, calculus, or higher-level mathematics.
  • Write proofs of theorems.
  • Accurately interpret mathematical or statistical information in relation to procedures, concepts, or applications.
  • Write computer programs or run computer packages to perform quantitative tasks.

Programs

    MajorInterdisciplinary OptionsMinor

    Courses

      MathematicsStatistics

      Return to {$returnto_text} Return to: Loyola College of Arts and Sciences