Mathematical Olympiad Summer Program

Revision as of 00:31, 13 August 2006 by Myself (talk | contribs) (Introduction: edited a bit)

The Mathematical Olympiad Summer Program (abbreviated MOSP or MOP) is a 3-week intensive problem solving camp held at the University of Nebraska - Lincoln to help high school students prepare for math olympaids, most notably the International Mathematical Olympiad. The USAMO winners and honorable mentions, the next 15 or so top scoring non-seniors, as well as the top 30 or so 9th graders on the USAMO, are invited to participate.

Purpose

One purpose of MOSP is to select and train the US team for the International Mathematical Olympiad. This is done at the start of MOSP via a team selection test (TST). The results of the USAMO and the TST are weighted equally when selecting the US IMO team.

The other important purpose of MOSP is to train younger students in Olympiad-level problem solving.

Locations

MOSP is currently held at University of Nebraska, Lincoln. Previous locations have included IMSA, Rutgers University, West Point (US Military Academy), and the US Naval Academy.

Structure

Each Weekday consists of three instructional sessions: 8:30 AM - 11:30 AM, 1:15 PM - 3:15 PM, and 8:00 PM - 10:00 PM. Classes usually consist of a lecture followed by a problem set. Solutions are often presented by students with the supervision of an instructor. Timed and graded olympiad style tests are an integral part of MOSP. Every few days, a 4-hour, 3-question test is administered, and is graded with comments within 2-3 days. Team tests also occur weekly. Students are divided into teams of five, and work on a set of twenty-five problems for approximately half a week. On the day of the contest, the teams present solutions to problems which have not yet been presented, in arbitrary order. The fun starts when all of the easy problems have been taken, and teams resort to certain creative methods in order to solve a problem.

Naming

The AMC abbreviates the program as "MOSP" in all of their publications, so that has to be considered the "official" abbreviation of the program. However, most participants and alumni of the program drop the "S" and call it simply "MOP", as it is much easier to pronounce.

Links

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