Difference between revisions of "American Regions Mathematics League"
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− | {{WotWAnnounce|week= | + | {{WotWAnnounce|week=June 6-12}} |
The '''American Regions Math League''' (ARML) is a [[mathematical problem solving]] competition primarily for U.S. high school students. | The '''American Regions Math League''' (ARML) is a [[mathematical problem solving]] competition primarily for U.S. high school students. | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{Contest Info|name=ARML|region=USA|type=Free Response|difficulty=3.5-6|breakdown=<u>Individual</u>: 4 (Problem 6/8), 6 (Problem 10)<br><u>Team</u>: 3.5 (Problem 1-5), 5 (Problem 6-10)}} | ||
== How to participate == | == How to participate == | ||
Line 9: | Line 11: | ||
== History == | == History == | ||
− | ARML was started in 1976 | + | ARML was started in 1976 as a mathematics competition |
== Format == | == Format == | ||
The ARML has several different events: | The ARML has several different events: | ||
− | *A team round, in which the entire team works on problems | + | *A team round, in which the entire team works on ten problems together |
− | *A power round, where the questions are proof-oriented | + | *A power round, where the questions are proof-oriented and are in a theme |
− | *An individual round, where each individual takes a test | + | *An individual round, where each individual takes a ten question test |
− | *Two relay rounds, where the answer to one problem is necessary to solve | + | *Two relay rounds, where the answer to one problem is necessary to solve the next problem |
− | *A super relay | + | *A super relay, a relay round where each team submits one answer |
== Resources == | == Resources == | ||
Line 24: | Line 26: | ||
=== Books === | === Books === | ||
− | There are four books of past ARML problems, though some of them are out of print and/or hard to find | + | There are four books of past ARML problems, though some of them are out of print and/or hard to find. |
*[http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0962640166/artofproblems-20 ARML-NYSML 1989-1994] (see [[NYSML]]). | *[http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0962640166/artofproblems-20 ARML-NYSML 1989-1994] (see [[NYSML]]). | ||
− | * [http://www.arml.com/ | + | * [http://www.arml.com/arml_development/page/index.php?page_type=public&page=16 The ARML book website] |
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== See also == | == See also == | ||
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* [[Math contest books]] | * [[Math contest books]] | ||
* [[Math books]] | * [[Math books]] | ||
− | + | * [[Mock ARML]] | |
[[Category:Mathematics competitions]] | [[Category:Mathematics competitions]] | ||
+ | [[Category:ARML]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Intermediate mathematics competitions]] |
Latest revision as of 16:06, 7 March 2020
This is an AoPSWiki Word of the Week for June 6-12 |
The American Regions Math League (ARML) is a mathematical problem solving competition primarily for U.S. high school students.
ARML |
Region: USA |
Type: Free Response |
Difficulty: 3.5-6 |
Difficulty Breakdown:
Individual: 4 (Problem 6/8), 6 (Problem 10) |
How to participate
Find out if your area has a team already. Contact ARML for details. If your area does not already have a team, ask ARML how to start one.
See the How to join an ARML team wiki page for more info. Teams have 15 students.
History
ARML was started in 1976 as a mathematics competition
Format
The ARML has several different events:
- A team round, in which the entire team works on ten problems together
- A power round, where the questions are proof-oriented and are in a theme
- An individual round, where each individual takes a ten question test
- Two relay rounds, where the answer to one problem is necessary to solve the next problem
- A super relay, a relay round where each team submits one answer
Resources
Books
There are four books of past ARML problems, though some of them are out of print and/or hard to find.