Posted on 07/13/2018 10:47:36 AM PDT by BBell
The U.S. team won first place for the third time in four years at the 59th International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO) which took place in Cluj-Napoca, Romania on July 3-14, 2018, with 116 countries participating. Prior to a fourth place finish in 2017, the U.S. team won first place in 2015 and 2016 in the prestigious international competition. In 2018, the International Mathematical Olympiad brought together the top math students from around the world with 615 student competitors.
The six U.S. team members also took home five gold medals and one silver medal for their individual high scores in the competition, known as the olympics of mathematics competitions for high school students. The first place U.S. team score was 212 out of a possible 252 points. The teams from Russia and China took second and third place respectively in cumulative team scores.
The 2018 U.S. International Mathematical Olympiad team is: Adam Ardeishar, Andrew Gu, Vincent Huang, James Lin, Michael Ren, and Mihir Singhal. Gu, Huang, and Lin are returning team members from 2017 and Lin earned a perfect score.
"We are very happy to place first for the third time in four years, highlighting our country's consistent mathematical talent and problem-solving capabilities among our high school students," said Michael Pearson, executive director of the Mathematical Association of America. "This shows the strength of the MAA American Mathematics Competitions to build the problem-solving skills that students will use in the future to positively impact society. With the IMO team representing the top talent from the more than 300,000 students who participate in the MAA American Mathematics Competitions annually, we can look ahead to a growing population of problem solvers," he said.
Students qualify for the U.S. IMO team by participating in a series of competitions provided by the Mathematical Association of America's competitions program, called the MAA American Mathematics Competitions (AMC). More than 300,000 students participate in the MAA American Mathematics Competitions each year which leads the nation in strengthening the mathematical capabilities of the next generation of problem-solvers. The six U.S. team members joined 70 of their peers from the United States and ten other countries at MAA's Mathematical Olympiad Summer Program in June to immerse themselves in problem solving and train for the IMO and other international competitions like the European Girls' Mathematical Olympiad (EGMO) where the U.S. team, organized by MAA, won second place in April.
The team was accompanied by coach Po-Shen Loh, professor of mathematics at Carnegie Mellon University, and deputy coach Sasha Rudenko, a graduate student at Carnegie Mellon University.
IMO scores are based on the number of points scored by individual team members on six problems. On each day of the two-day competition, the teams have 4.5 hours to work on three problems.
I’m confused you posted, 6 competitors and six males (is that 12)
so the “competitors” are female and the males are not competitors.
Moral support?
Mihira?
This is clearly yet another example of White Privilege.
As a Harvard alum, I want to point out these are precisely the kind of kind of students Harvard’s admissions system is limits in the name of “diversity.”
A group representing Asian applicants to Harvard has filed a Federal law suit against Harvard charging that their admission system discriminates illegally.
This a case that bears close watching by those who wish for a colorblind system.
The girl is presumably one of the coaches from Carnegie-Mellon.
As to public schools, I would bet one or more come from the NY elite high schools...not yet sabotaged by Mayor DiBlaggio. I was the best math student in a Jesuit High School, by a long margin, but competing against Stuyvessant, Bronx Sci., Broiklyn Tech, etc, students was humiliating.
Not one Smith, Jones, Johnson or McIntosh among them.............LOL!
Huh???
All you had to do is read the second paragraph in the article:
The six U.S. team members also took home five gold medals and one silver medal
Funny how that works out isn't it?
Based on what you just wrote, you're not serious about being a Harvard alum are you???????
Better? ;)
Seriously, though, who wouldn't prefer to have those kids in their country over some troglodyte ball-kickers/runners/jumpers/spear-chuckers? (Not that there is anything wrong with sporting competitions as such!)
The caption quoted in this thread is a little confusing. I'd assume that the seven people named in it are the seven people who aren't in a bear costumeHuh???
All you had to do is read the second paragraph in the article: The six U.S. team members also took home five gold medals and one silver medal
Funny how that works out isn't it?
The caption has seven names, there are seven people with visible faces in the picture, and it's initially tempting to read the caption as if the names match the faces.
Absolutely serious. It is very troubling, especially in the case of a school with a sordid history of religious quotas in the 1920s.
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