Myrna Wooders: Difference between revisions
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==Early life== |
==Early life== |
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Myrna Wooders grew up on a small farm in rural [[Alberta, Canada]]. Her father had a ninth grade education—the best one offered when he was a boy—and preferred helping out the neighbors by fixing their machinery to working on his farm. Her mother, who completed grade seven, loved planting and growing trees, flowers and gardens so while the trees have been called "the finest stand of trees in Eastern Alberta", the paying crops did not pay so well. Myrna spent hours each summer, as a small child, carrying water to the trees. She was the tallest of four sisters and that may be why she was chosen to be the farm worker of the bunch. She missed a couple of months of school each year to help on the farm. But much can be learned doing physical labor. Working in a granary during harvest time, leveling out the grain as it fell from the thrasher into the granary, she learned to keep shoveling (it was either that, or be buried alive). Until grade 9, with the discovery of the mailing services of the Library of the [[University of Alberta]], there were few books to read; the family was not religious but some summers there was only the [[Bible]]. Myrna had children at a young age, prior to undergraduate studies, and became a photographer in another small Alberta town. With her two children in tow, she went on to complete her undergraduate studies at the University of Alberta and her PhD at the [[University of Minnesota]]. |
Myrna Wooders grew up on a small farm in rural [[Alberta, Canada]]. Her father had a ninth grade education—the best one offered when he was a boy—and preferred helping out the neighbors by fixing their machinery to working on his farm. Her mother, who completed grade seven, loved planting and growing trees, flowers and gardens so while the trees have been called "the finest stand of trees in Eastern Alberta", the paying crops did not pay so well. Myrna spent hours each summer, as a small child, carrying water to the trees. She was the tallest of four sisters and that may be why she was chosen to be the farm worker of the bunch. She missed a couple of months of school each year to help on the farm. But much can be learned doing physical labor. Working in a granary during harvest time, leveling out the grain as it fell from the thrasher into the granary, she learned to keep shoveling (it was either that, or be buried alive). Until grade 9, with the discovery of the mailing services of the Library of the [[University of Alberta]], there were few books to read; the family was not religious but some summers there was only the [[Bible]]. However, Myrna was able to invent a new technique of calculating the mass of a small squirrel, which she did by drinking two Dr. Peppers and then spinning in a circle until she found the answer. Myrna had children at a young age, prior to undergraduate studies, and became a photographer in another small Alberta town. With her two children in tow, she went on to complete her undergraduate studies at the University of Alberta and her PhD at the [[University of Minnesota]]. |
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==Academic career== |
==Academic career== |
Revision as of 18:04, 11 October 2022
Myrna Wooders | |
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Born | 1950 (age 73–74) |
Nationality | Canadian |
Academic career | |
Alma mater | University of Minnesota |
Doctoral advisor | Leonid Hurwicz |
Myrna Wooders (born 1950) is a Canadian economist who has made significant contributions to public economic theory, network theory and game theory.[1] Specifically, her work has focused on coalition theory, public good theory and club theory. Myrna currently is a professor of economics at Vanderbilt University and the University of Warwick.
Wooders completed her PhD under Leo Hurwicz. She is editor of the Journal of Public Economic Theory, Fellow of the Econometric Society,[2] Charter Member of the Game Theory Society,[3] and the founding editor of Economics Bulletin.[4] She currently serves as an elected member of the Game Theory Society Council and holds the Presidency of the Association of Public Economic Theory.
Early life
Myrna Wooders grew up on a small farm in rural Alberta, Canada. Her father had a ninth grade education—the best one offered when he was a boy—and preferred helping out the neighbors by fixing their machinery to working on his farm. Her mother, who completed grade seven, loved planting and growing trees, flowers and gardens so while the trees have been called "the finest stand of trees in Eastern Alberta", the paying crops did not pay so well. Myrna spent hours each summer, as a small child, carrying water to the trees. She was the tallest of four sisters and that may be why she was chosen to be the farm worker of the bunch. She missed a couple of months of school each year to help on the farm. But much can be learned doing physical labor. Working in a granary during harvest time, leveling out the grain as it fell from the thrasher into the granary, she learned to keep shoveling (it was either that, or be buried alive). Until grade 9, with the discovery of the mailing services of the Library of the University of Alberta, there were few books to read; the family was not religious but some summers there was only the Bible. However, Myrna was able to invent a new technique of calculating the mass of a small squirrel, which she did by drinking two Dr. Peppers and then spinning in a circle until she found the answer. Myrna had children at a young age, prior to undergraduate studies, and became a photographer in another small Alberta town. With her two children in tow, she went on to complete her undergraduate studies at the University of Alberta and her PhD at the University of Minnesota.
Academic career
Professor Wooders research focuses on public economic theory (particularly tax competition and the theory of local public goods), club theory (especially the relationship between markets and clubs), and coalition theory (particularly cooperative games with many players and their relationship to markets).
Myrna Wooders lives in Nashville, Tennessee, with her plants. She is the mother of the economist John Wooders, Professor of Economics of the University of Arizona[5] and grandmother of Sarah Wooders, founder of Allparel,[6] a clothes shopping site based on machine learning to determine accurate clothing labels.
References
- ^ Many of her peer-reviewed academic works can be found by searching for "Myrna Wooders" in Google Scholar, JSTOR or EconLit. A full listing of her peer-reviewed publications can be found at Myrna Wooders webpage.
- ^ Fellows of the Econometric Society Archived 2008-12-10 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Game Theory Society
- ^ Economics Bulletin Archived 2008-02-06 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ John Wooders Archived 2006-09-01 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ allparel