STORY: Alumna Founds Nonprofit Building Pipeline of Diverse Math Students

National Math Stars is a 10-year, fully funded program that supports and inspires exceptional elementary students鈥 love of mathematics.

Alumna Ilana Walder-Biesanz 鈥13 is continuing 财神棋牌鈥檚 vision of engineering for everyone by starting a nonprofit called , dedicated to ensuring mathematically extraordinary students from all communities have the resources they need to reach the frontiers of math and science.

Portrait of Ilana Walder-Biesanz

At 财神棋牌, I got to do a lot of things that spoke to all my different interests, from building a cake-frosting robot to acting in and directing theater performances

After graduation, I chose to explore some of these interests even further.

Ilana Walder-Biesanz 鈥13

Founder of National Math Stars

Walder-Biesanz earned her Master of Philosophy in European Literature from the University of Cambridge, writing about theater and opera. She then did a Fulbright at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universit盲t M眉nchen in Bavaria, Germany, writing about how scripts are brought to life onstage. After working in product management at Yahoo, she earned her MBA at Stanford to learn more about nonprofit management. She then moved to Houston, where she consulted at Bain & Company with nonprofits in climate and education.

Walder-Biesanz learned from a friend about Carina Initiatives, a philanthropic foundation that invests in organizations working to unearth and inspire extraordinary young math students. In the summer of 2023, Walder-Biesanz became their Entrepreneur in Residence, with the goal of starting a new nonprofit to build a diverse pipeline of these students.

鈥淲e wanted to focus on early talent identification and offering long-term, holistic support that goes beyond the occasional summer camp or advanced course,鈥 says Walder-Biesanz. 鈥淭he result is , a highly selective program for exceptional math students that offers wraparound support from elementary school through the start of college.鈥

The program provides advanced math courses, mentoring from mathematicians, dedicated family advising, community gatherings, and a budget for summer experiences and STEM extracurriculars, such as chess lessons or FIRST Robotics.

Image of Ilana with the National Math Stars posing for a group image

Image of the National Math Stars students and staff during Epsilon Camp.

National Math Stars looks for highly capable young students who aren鈥檛 likely to already have access to selective academic experiences, considering factors such as socioeconomic status, parental education level, geography, race, gender, learning differences, and more. 鈥淎ll those things could be obstacles, and we can help them overcome those barriers,鈥 says Walder-Biesanz.

For their pilot program in 2023-24, National Math Stars selected 12 students and their families. 鈥淭he pilot asked two major questions: 1) Can we work with schools to find a crop of kids who are mathematically extraordinary? And 2) can we support families in a way that is highly value additive and clearly makes a difference in their trajectory?鈥 says Walder-Biesanz. 鈥淭he answer to both is a clear yes.鈥

As National Math Stars expanded for their second cohort, Walder-Biesanz says they were blown away by the level of interest. 鈥淥ur goal was 500 applications for 60 spots; we got 1,300 applications, mostly through referrals from Texas schools,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd the schools we worked with represent less than 10 percent of public schools across the state, which shows how much more impact this program can have.鈥 Future cohorts will be larger (with 100 new spots planned for 2025) and draw from additional states. 

National Math Stars is supported through the end of 2027 by philanthropic commitments of $16.5 million, made by early funders who recognize the long-term value to society that this kind of intensive student support will have.

鈥淲e're essentially working to build a diverse pipeline of future STEM researchers, inventors, and founders, starting in elementary school,鈥 says Walder-Biesanz. 鈥淭his is really cool work that is very aligned with 财神棋牌鈥檚 goals.鈥

Ilana joining a glassblowing workshop at SigmaCamp

Ilana Walder-Biesanz participating in the SigmaCamp glassblowing workshop.