Academic programme Structured Masters programme The flagship programme of AIMS
South Africa is a 10-month Structured Masters programme in the Mathematical Sciences. The programme was upgraded in 2012 from a Postgraduate Diploma. The master's degree is conferred by the three South African universities in the partnership. Students from Africa can apply for full scholarships, including travel, board & lodging, tuition, and a stipend. AIMS is committed to greater participation by women in science and a geographically representative student body from the African continent. Visiting faculty have included
David MacKay,
Bernt Øksendal, David Aschman (
Cape Town), Alan Beardon (
Cambridge), Jordi Campos (
Barcelona), Jesus Cerquides (
Spanish National Research Council), Patrick Dorey (
Durham), Pedro Ferreira (
Oxford), Jan Govaerts (
Leuven), Barry Green (
Stellenbosch), Gordon Johnson (
Houston), Dirk Laurie (
Stellenbosch), Sanjoy Mahajan (
MIT,
Olin),
Vincent Rivasseau (
University of Paris), Bernd Schroers (
Heriot-Watt), Robert de Mello Koch (
Witwatersrand), Rob Beezer (
University of Puget Sound), Jeff Sanders (
United Nations University International Institute for Software Technology), and
Tadashi Tokieda (
Stanford). Each visiting lecturer teaches an intensive three-week-long module. The goal of the programme is to produce students capable of doing a high quality research-based master's degree. Special emphasis is placed on intuitive understanding, problem solving skills, collaboration, scientific writing skills, and computer modelling using
Free Software such as
SageMath,
SciPy, and
R. AIMS offers scholarships for many alumni continuing studies in South Africa.
Honours Degree in Mathematical Biology AIMS, in conjunction with
University of Stellenbosch, offers an honours degree in
Mathematical Biology for South African students.
Honours Degree in Mathematical Finance An honours degree in
Mathematical Finance is being offered for South African students in conjunction with
University of Stellenbosch and the
University of Cape Town.
Master's and doctoral studies In the
AIMS Research Centre students, often AIMS alumni, study towards a MSc or PhD degree under supervision of a resident researcher in
Mathematical Biology and
Mathematical Finance.
Research centre AIMS
South Africa hosts a research centre that opened in May 2008.
Stephen Hawking visited the AIMS research centre and AIMS-Next Einstein Initiative launch. The centre specialises in
Mathematical Biology,
Industrial Mathematics,
Mathematical Finance,
Astrophysics &
Cosmology, and
Computer Algebra. Bursaries are offered for Master's and doctoral studies.
School Enrichment Centre AIMS South Africa hosts a School Enrichment Centre which offers free learning resources and professional development courses for South African mathematics teachers.
Workshops and conferences AIMS South Africa regularly hosts short conferences or workshops in mathematics and its applications, especially in
physics,
mathematical finance,
epidemiology. Other topics include
scientific modelling or
system administration using
Debian GNU/Linux as a platform.
Public lectures Regular public lectures on a wide range of topics are offered by
eminent scientists at the forefront of research in their field.
Funding AIMS South Africa is sponsored by international corporations, international development organisations and the South African departments of
Education and
Science and Technology. In February 2010,
Google donated $1 million to AIMS. In July 2010, Canada committed CAN$20 million of federal funding to AIMS and the
AIMS-Next Einstein Initiative. The funds are administered by the
International Development Research Centre and the
Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics. In September 2010, the AIMS Next Einstein Initiative
AIMS-NEI was awarded US$2 million from
Google's Project 10^100. Individuals donate to AIMS on GivenGain. == AIMS Ghana ==