Jump to content

Menu

Has anyone competed in Mathcounts?


Recommended Posts

We've had two very successful years at Mathcounts; last year we placed third and this year fifth, in the Pittsburgh chapter competition (among about 30 schools). It was very fun and motivating!

 

We joined up with a group of homeschoolers, since you need 4 students in grades 6-8 to have a team, but I know you can still compete as an individual mathlete even without a team.

 

There are plenty of books and problem sets available from the Mathcounts website that you can work through. We had one mother in charge, who brought the kids together every week for two hours to work on the sprint rounds, count-down problems, target rounds-- all that stuff.

 

Now, if you want even more practice, you can look at the Art of Problem solving website. They run Mathcounts problem solving classes online. We are doing their Number Theory class right now, and it is very well done. By the way, they also run an AMC 10 and AIME class too, I believe.

 

Good luck! It is a fun program! My ds, eighth grade, will miss participating in it, since now he will be too old. But dd, 6th grade, has two more years, so we're definitely going to continue.

 

Last point: I have a math professor friend with a very bright math son, but he never encouraged Mathcounts because he felt that kind of quick problems are really "crossword puzzles" of math, just brain teasers and not at all the deep thinking that true mathematics is all about. Hmmmm. I'm sure he has a point. But nevertheless, it is fun to see the kids compete, and to improve your "quick and accurate" math skills, in my opinion!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

my oldest at local and state levels on a homeschool team that I coached. They did really well - 4th in the state of NC - which is a "math" state -even had a student go on to the national level which he thoroughly enjoyed. It was the best thing we have ever done and we both actually miss it. You really do need a team of at least 4 people. Even if the team never goes on beyond the local level, the skills gained and fun had are definitely worth it.

 

I taught a Problem Solving class at the beginning of the school year and from that we chose 4 team members and 2 alternates (training for the next year). Then between New Year and Feb competition, the team/alt worked past years' competitions. Part of the competitions are done as individuals to be tallied as a team and there is one part, where the 4 will work together to complete a section of the test (team skills will be important - good communication). We have seen the trickle down effects from MathCounts on his PSAT/SAT scores this year. There are so many different ways, you could work getting into it.

 

It is pretty easy to sign up. Pay the $s for material, work problems, sign up for local competition and GO! haha

 

Go Mathletes! Can you tell this is a passion on mine! haha:D

 

Susie

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

×
×
  • Create New...