Pendred Noyce

Pendred (Penny) Noyce  is a doctor, educator, and writer.  She grew up in California, completed a degree in biochemistry at Harvard and a medical degree at Stanford, and did her residency in internal medicine in Minnesota.  She then moved to the Boston area, where she practiced at a community health center for several years.  In 1991, she helped establish the Noyce Foundation in honor of her father, Robert Noyce, co-inventor of the integrated circuit and co-founder of Intel.  The foundation focuses on improving K-12 education, particularly in mathematics and science.

From 1993-2002, Penny helped lead a statewide math and science improvement effort called PALMS in the state of Massachusetts.  While raising her five children, Penny served on the boards of numerous non-profits, including most recently the Gulf of Maine Research Institute, the Rennie Center for Education Research and Policy, TERC, the Libra Foundation of Maine, the Concord Consortium, and the Consortium for Mathematics and Its Applications.

As her older children set off for college, Penny began writing for middle-grade children.  Her first two novels for children were Lost in Lexicon: An Adventure in Words and Numbers and The Ice Castle: An Adventure in Music, both available from Scarletta Press.  She has also edited a text for educators, New Frontiers in Formative Assessment, available from Harvard Education Press.

Penny serves as the editorial lead for Tumblehome’s Galactic Academy of Science series of science mysteries.  Her own previous books in the series include The Desperate Case of the Diamond Chip and The Vicious Case of the Viral Vaccine (with Roberta Baxter). Tumblehome Learning represents a convergence of Penny’s interests in science, education, and great writing for kids.  Penny loves to travel, ski, ride horses, and explore islands.

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Pendred Noyce