Showing posts with label competition math. Show all posts
Showing posts with label competition math. Show all posts

Saturday, October 15, 2022

16 17 Mathcounts handbook more interesting questions that have nicer solutions

Thanks to Achuth for trying out these questions and time them as an actual Mathcounts test.  :) 

First week : warm up 1, 4, 7.  (time for 40 mins. like sprint)
Second week : warm up 2, 5, 8.
third week : workout 3 --> all right. (pair 1 to 6, 2 to 7, each time for 6 mins. as 
target) 
fourth week: workout 4 --> #95, then self correct. 

At lesson: workout 5 and other harder problems. 

These are nice questions that have various solutions, so it’s better to slow down and try them as puzzles.

Less is more and slow is fast.

If you are new to problem solving, one nice strategy is to make the question much simpler and explore ideas that come to your mind. 

Answer key down below. 

#66: A school of 100 fish swims in the ocean and comes to a very wide horizontal pipe. The fish have three choices to get to the food on the other side: swim above the pipe, through the pipe or below the pipe. If we do not consider the fish individually, in how many ways can the entire school of fish be partitioned into three groups with each group choosing a different one of the three options and with at least one fish in each group? 


 #105 When fully matured, a grape contains 80% water. After the drying process, called dehydration, the resulting raisin is only 20% water. What fraction of the original water in the grape remains after dehydration? Express your answer as a common fraction. 


 #112: Cora has five balls—two red, two blue and one yellow—which are indistinguishable except for their color. She has two containers—one red and one green. If the balls are randomly distributed between the two containers, what is the probability that the two red balls will be alone in the red container? Express your answer as a common fraction? 


 #116: A 12-foot by 12-foot square bathroom needs to be tiled with 1-foot square tiles. Two of the tiles are the wrong color. If the tiles are placed randomly, what is the probability that the two wrong-colored tiles share an edge? Express your answer as a common fraction.













#66: 4851

#105:  1/16

#112:  1/32

#116: 1/39 



Sunday, April 8, 2018

Learn How to Learn by BOGTRO from AoPS forum -- Thanks a bunch !!

I love the following quotes :

Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.
I previously thought it's from Albert Einstein, but it's not. I love it anyway. 

You can practice shooting eight hours a day, but if your technique is wrong, then all you become is very good at shooting the wrong way. Get the fundamentals down and the level of everything you do will rise.”
from Michael Jordan 

"When you first start off trying to solve a problem, the first solutions you come up with are very complex, and most people stop there. But if you keep going, and live with the problem and peel more layer of the onion off, you can often times arrive at some very elegant and simple solutions."
- Steve Jobs, 2006 

5 ways to Kill your dreams from TED talk 



Below, BOGTRO from AoPS has graciously allow me to post his well-thoughtout article on "Learn How to Learn".

I wish more students will read it , and don't just read it once, but many times at different intervals and really internalize the method. It will help you not just with problem solving/competition math, but learning in general. 


Learn How to Learn 

About a month ago I was PMed by a member, asking for advice as to how to prepare for MATHCOUNTS. I (strangely) get a lot of these types of PMs, but this one was slightly different. Whereas normally I could answer something along the lines of "read Volume 1, do practice tests, profit", this user was complaining that despite having rigorously worked through Volume 1 and CMMS (I still don't know what this is, but it's implied to be a book), he was still scoring only in the low 20s on sprints. 
To some extent, I was able to relate. Back in my MATHCOUNTS days, I was doing loads of practice tests, learning new techniques to shave off precious seconds, and even practicing hitting a buzzer quickly. But my results only marginally improved. Gradually I understood that he was facing the exact same problem I was - although we were doing plenty of work, we were doing it in the wrong way.

After some thought, I formulated a long but fairly detailed response. Given that state-national season is rolling around, and with it the usual abundance of "how do I prepare" threads, I'm reproducing it below (with some minor edits). I referenced sprint several times because that was the specific complaint by the user, but obviously you can replace "sprint" with "target" or even "countdown", or any combination thereof.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
You first need to determine why it is that you're getting low scores on sprint.
Are you running out of time? 
Making stupid mistakes? 
Bad at computation? Or
 do you honestly not know how to do the problems? 
The former three are rectified with simply a lot of (effective) practice, where I say "effective" because simply blazing through problems, checking your score, and moving on is not going to help you very much. You need to be critically analyzing almost every problem - not just the ones you got wrong. Sure, you don't need to think too hard about your process on #2, but questions that take you longer than you would like, you get wrong, or you do in a "bashy" way need to be reviewed.

Essentially, you should be following something similar to the following process. Of course, this is not something that is going to work for 100% of people. The point here is not that you should be following these guidelines like a bible, but that you need to think about how to get the maximum benefit out of each practice test you take. You may very well find that the below system doesn't work for you (though you should at least give it a chance - it may seem "boring" at first, but after some time you'll be going through it like it's second nature and learning excellent habits along the way), in which case you should come up with an alteration that works for you. If (or more likely when) you choose to develop your own preparation system, keep in mind that the basic elements should be present - rigorous review of problems you got wrong, self-reflection on why you got them wrong, and so on.
  • Take any MATHCOUNTS sprint round under contest conditions. It doesn't really matter which one you take, though it should be fairly recent for best results. When you're done, score with a simple checkmark or X system - don't look through the solutions immediately. Make a note of the problems that took you a long time, even if you got them correct.
  • Without timing yourself (though you shouldn't spend more than 15 minutes or so), solve the problems that you either got wrong or didn't answer during the test. This will partially tell you if you're getting questions wrong because of time constraints or because you don't know the material.
  • At this point you should have 4 separate categories of problems:
    • Completely correct - don't worry about these at all. Though there is some benefit to looking these over, they are significantly less important than all the other questions.
    • Correct, but took you a long time. Identify why it took you a long time - and if it matters. A problem taking you 2-3 minutes may sound like a killer, but in general if you only have a couple of these questions that's completely fine. Even if there's only one "timesink", you should be looking through alternate solutions to doing these problems. I find that problems that usually cause timesinks are either geometry problems that are semi-direct applications of similar triangles (which are naturally fairly easy to coordinate bash or something similarly slow, but this may take a while) or counting problems where you just listed out the possibilities and counted them up. Unfortunately, many MATHCOUNTS problems have this as their intended solution, so there's not a great deal you can do about those. However, even though there may not be a cleaner solution, minute steps during your bashing may prove important. And in the event that even with optimizations the problem will still take 2-3 minutes, you may want to just skip it altogether even if you know exactly how to do it.
    • Incorrect (or blank), but you solved it after the test. These are questions that you know how to do, but you ran out of time doing. Important is to determine how long it took you to solve these questions. If you solved 2 questions in 30 seconds each after the test, clearly that's worse than solving one problem in the second category. These second and third categories are quite similar and should be evaluated against each other (a quite reasonable rule of thumb is to save any counting question that you don't see how to do within ~10 seconds for later).
    • Incorrect, and you couldn't solve it after the test. Look up the solution, searching (or even posting) on AoPS if necessary (which you should likely do anyway, as MATHCOUNTS official solutions are often horrendous). If it's a situation where you just forgot something that you really knew, it's easy to pass this off as a fluke and move on. However, this is a grave mistake. Perhaps if it happens once or twice in an otherwise good practice, you can kind of gloss over it. But make a note of it anyway. Whenever you hit two problems in the same general category that you didn't solve (keep your categories broad, but not too broad. "Geometry" is too broad a category, while "trignometric relations in geometric models of algebraic inequalities" is too specific to be helpful. Something like "similar triangles" or "factoring" is a much better type of category), you should immediately stop your practicing and look up the relevant sections in whatever book you have (e.g. Volume 1, or whatever CMMS is, or even just an internet search, etc.). Don't move on until you are confident in that area. By "confident", I don't mean that you can approach these kinds of problems once in a while. I mean that once you identify a question as being in your category, you should be able to solve it relatively quickly at least 75% of the time.
  • File away every single problem that you got wrong. Categorize these as either "I solved this afterwards" (include the time it took you to solve it - approximate is fine) or "I didn't solve this afterwards". You will need these later. Take a break - read a book, play some FTW, go outside, play League of Legends, whatever floats your boat. There's not much value in overloading yourself, especially so close to chapter. If you're feeling particularly ambitious, review a chapter on a topic that you have trouble with.There is no point to reviewing topics you already can solve problems in regularly.
  • At the end of the week, collect every single problem on your "incorrect problems list". If you're going through a test a day, these shouldn't number more than 50. Do these like you would a test under contest conditions. Compare your results to your incorrect problems paper (how long it took you to solve the problems, and whether you got them correct). The fact that you've seen the problems already should compensate for the fact that you need to work quicker. If you get a problem wrong, do the same process - don't time yourself while solving all of the remaining problems.
  • If you got the same problem wrong twice, there are 3 scenarios:
    • You got it wrong both times, but finished it after the test both times. This speaks to your (lack of?) time management, something that comes much more naturally with practice. Keep in mind that MATHCOUNTS really only tests a very small amount of concepts (relatively speaking), so working through old problems virtually guarantees that almost all MATHCOUNTS problems will already be more or less familiar to you on test day.
    • You couldn't solve it at all the first time, but solved it after the test the second time. This is improvement, so it's perfectly fine.
    • You didn't solve it the second time around. This means that you don't understand the concept - back to the books.
  • Take all the problems you got correct (during the test) off your "incorrect problems" sheet, and continue to repeat the process from the top.

This may seem like quite a bit of work when typed up here, but in reality it's not. Instead of perpetuating the cycle of "do a practice test, score it, move on, read some books in some disorganized fashion, take another practice test, hope for improvement" (not even necessarily in that order, which is even more problematic), instead we optimize this routine by taking a single practice test a day and making sure that we get everything possible out of it. There are only so many tests, and a frequent complaint is that people have run out of old contests to do. While this may be true, this most likely means that they're not doing the tests properly. A single test with the time taken to reflect, organize, and perform a targeted review is significantly more beneficial than 5 tests taken without a goal in mind.

All in all, this should take at most a little over an hour per day (a little more at the end of the week). You are, of course, welcome to do more, but there's a sort of diminishing returns law past a certain point. Devoting a great deal of time to MATHCOUNTS is going to seem like a serious mistake in hindsight (I was among the most guilty of this), especially if you realize you were spending time incredibly inefficiently. I won't give an exact quote here (simply because I don't remember it and a quick search doesn't turn it up), but one MATHCOUNTS winner (Albert Ni?) said something along the lines of
Quote:
I knew that I wouldn't be the smartest mathlete competing. But I could, quite realistically, be the hardest working one [...]

In MATHCOUNTS, that's all that's required. But quantifying the term "hard work" is necessary - someone who is pushing a boulder from point A 25% of the way to point B is doing a lot of work for very little benefit, while someone who uses a truck to carry the same boulder to point B is doing significantly less work for significantly more benefit. Perhaps as a more accurate analogy, take two people in a shooting contest. As soon as the whistle blows, person A starts shooting haphazardly at his target, hitting it once in a while but constantly having to reload. Person B, on the other hand, takes his time, lines up his shots, and hits the target with deadly accuracy. This is very similar to MATHCOUNTS. Person A is blowing through his material quickly, getting little benefit overall, but naturally with the experience of shooting comes some slight improvement. On the other side of things, person B is taking the time to think about how best to use his limited resources to improve as best he can. Sure, he starts off a bit slower, and at the end of the day he might still have some ammunition left unused, but overall he hits the target more. The first approach is popular because it's very easy to feel like you're doing something - after all, if you're spending 4 hours a day on practice MATHCOUNTS tests, you're outworking everyone else, right? Don't fall into this trap. Line up your shots.

Tuesday, September 27, 2016

2016 AMC-8 Prep

Interesting articles on math for this week:

How to Fall in Love With Math by Manil Suri from the New York Times

The Simpsons' secret formula : it's written by math geeks by Simon Singh from the Guardian

For this week's self studies (part I work):
Review:

2009 #25 : Review using the Harvey method. :D

2008 #25   Don't use the method on the link. Use the much faster method we talked about at our lesson.

2008 #24  Make a chart. Slow down on similar question such as this one. 
This type of problem is very easy to make mistake on under or overcounting. 
Skip first and definitely slow down and double, triple check. 

2007 #25 Read the solution if you don't get the method we talked about at our lesson.
It takes time to develop insights so you need to be patient.
If you understand the method, this question will be easy, right ?
Stay with this question longer.

2007 #24 
Aayush's method is faster.
(To get the sum of three digits that is a multiple of 3, you either get rid of 1 or 4 [do you see it jumps by 3, why?] ) , so the answer is 1/2.

2006 #25
I've seen other problems (AMC-10s) using the oddest prime, which is "2", the only prime number that is even.
Thus, make sure you understand this question.

2006#24  Taking out the factor question.
Also, learn "1001 = 7 x 11 x 13"
"23 x 29 = 667"

2005 #25 Venn diagram is your friend.

2005 #24 Working backwards is the way to go.

For part II work :
This week, work on the last 5 problems from AMC-8 year 2010, 2011, 2012, 1999 and 1998.
Here is the link from AoPs.

Sam' original question:
David has a bag of 8 different-colored six-sided dice. Their colors are red, blue, yellow, green, purple, orange, black, and white. What is the probability that David takes out a red die, rolls a 6, then takes out a purple die, and rolls another 6 without replacement?

Solution:
The probability of rolling a 6 on a red die is 1/8 * 1/6 = 1/48. The probability of rolling a purple die and rolling a 6 after that, without replacement, is 1/7 * 1/6 = 1/42. Therefore, to get both events, 1/48 * 1/42 = 1/2016.

Evan's compiled question:
\(\sqrt {18+8\sqrt {2}}=a+b\sqrt {c}\)
a, b and c are positive integers. Find a + b + c.
Solution:
Square both sides and you have \(18+8\sqrt{2}\) = \( a^2 + 2ab\sqrt {2} + b^2c\)
You can see ab = 4 = 4 x 1 and c = 2
a = 4, b = 1 and c = 2 so the sum is 7.

Sounak's problem:
A rhombus with sides 4 is drawn. It has an angle of 60 degrees. What is length of the longer diagonal?

Solution:
Well first you have to draw the rhombus's height .The resulting triangle will be 30,60, 90 triangle.
We know the hypotenuse is 4 so now we know the rest of the sides are \(2\sqrt {3}\) and 2.
Now if we draw the diagonal we see that it makes another right angle triangle.
We know the legs of this triangle are the same as the previous lengths so then we know the diagonal is \(4\sqrt {3}\).



Tuesday, September 1, 2015

Testimonials for my services. So far, all through words of mouth locally or chance meets online and it's great.

Testimonials from my students/parents  :) 

Dear Mrs Lin,

I just did not get the opportunity earlier to thank you for all your help. _____ was able to make to the National MathCounts largely because of your excellent guidance and coaching. I do not know how to thank you. He had a great once-in-a-lifetime experience there and he really loved the competition as well as meeting other people.
If you can please provide me your mailing address, he wants to send you a gift as a token of thanks for your guidance and tutoring. 

Sincerely,


Dear Mrs. Lin,

I have been meaning to tell you, but just didn't get the time. He just 'LOVES' your sessions. He said he is learning so much and gets to do lots of problems and he likes all the tips/shortcuts you are teaching. He looks forward to your session - he was so upset when we couldn't get back on time from _____ because he didn't want to miss your session. Honestly we came back Tue night only because he cried so much that he didn't want to miss your class:) 

In school, his teacher focuses more on details like, put all the steps, write neatly, don't disturb the class by asking unnecessary questions, don't ask for more work, behave properly etc....so he is not too happy with math in school.

Thank you so much for making such a big difference in his life. He  enjoys doing the homework you are assigning him and has not complained at all. He said "Mrs Lin is so smart and I love her classes...wish she lived next to our house...so I can go to her and have live classes' [disclaimer : I'm not ; my students are much smarter than I and I learn along with them and it's exhilarating ]   Thank you so much!!

One thing he said was it would be helpful if he can have targeted practice worksheets on the tips covered during the class, after that class, so he can practice those shortcuts/tips more.

Hello Mrs. Lin,

This is ______ 's mom. We greatly appreciate your help in working with
______, keeping him motivated and providing him wth constant
encouragement. We are fortunate to have great mentors like you who
are so selfless in their services to our younger generation.

We have a request, can you please share your address. ______ wanted
to send you a card to express his thanks.

BTW, _______ has his chapter level competition tomorrow.

Warm Regards

Mrs. Lin,

Good Afternoon.
Me and my son, ___ and I, have used your blog pages and got a great insight into several of the techniques that you use to solve the problems. I am glad to inform you that _____ was placed 14th in the State Mathcounts for ____. Your blog information has helped us a lot in this preparation and we really want to appreciate all that you do in sharing the information. 

_____ is completing Geometry this year and he hopes to have a exciting next year for AMC 8 and Mathcounts. We hope to learn a lot more from your blog pages.

Regards,

Hi Mrs Lin,

I just finished The One World School House by Salman Khan and I have been thinking of you and the online community you created. Even though _____ and ____ have taken web based courses before, what makes your class different is your inspiration and enthusiasm - you really care about them as unique individuals and you sincerely expect the best from them, more than they (and I sometimes) think they can achieve. Thank you for encouraging them to become a more responsible and self driven learner.


Dear Mrs.Lin,

             I went to NSF tests today and got first place in the Math Bee III. The problems didn't seem that bad although I'm waiting to see my score online. I will most likely be going to nationals which will be held in Ohio this year so that's convenient. Lastly I would like to thank you for all you have done for me. I believe I've grown much more as a student under you and really appreciate everything you have shown me and taught me. I wouldn't be succeeding now if it wasn't for you. :)

Sincerely,

So far,in January state, in algebra 2 he came individual 2nd and one regional February he came 1st (competing with same state high school students while as an 8th grader) 

He could not participate in one regional bec of conflict with MathCounts chapter. We also want to share with you that he got admission into a private school for 9th gr with 100% scholarship. [more than 50 students in that high school are national merit semifinalists, so highly competitive]
Thank you,

An elementary whiz kid, national winners at Math Kangaroo and Math Olympiad. 


_____ will be off to summer sleep away camp where he is not allowed to have any electronics starting _____.  
_________ will be his last class with you for over a month.  He really has been enjoying it and  just so you know I never  have to ask him twice to do the work- crazy because everything else I ask him to do takes at least 5 tries :) 
He will be back online with you at _______ . 


There are many more but I'll take my time to update/upload these infor. sheets. 

To be continued ... 

I'm quite busy these days with resuming our Math Circle + many other projects (my students don't just excel at math, but many other areas equally fun and challenging + most Asian students have much bigger problems with critical reading/not to mention writing, taking initiatives and being strong leaders, and those are my other projects. 

Work-Life balance is utmost important. Less is more. 

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Sep. 4th, 2014 AMC-8 and Mathcounts State/National prep

To prepare for AMC-8 and Mathcounts simultaneously, it's a good idea to delete AMC-8 multiple choice options to make the test more like Mathcounts problems.

There are some tricky questions for AMC-8 test, so if you are at the Mathcounts state level in above average states, you might get better scores on AMC-10 tests than on AMC-8. (Sigh...)

That's what happened to quite a few of my students because their level is way up so they might not as focused as they worked on the more challenging, more interesting questions. Oh dear !!

Review the following very frequently tested concepts. You really don't need a lot of tools (formulas) but deeper understanding, tenacity and the love of thinking outside the box.

Review similar triangles

Review counting and probability

I'll put solutions to some of the "Mass Points" questions soon.

We all love "Mass Points".

Have fun problem solving. Cheers, Mrs. Lin

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

This Week's Work : Week 5 -- for Inquisitive Young Mathletes

Evan (a 5th grader in PA) 's Problem of the Week: 
A man notices a sign in Shop-a-Lot that says: "All prices are marked 25% off today only!" He decides to buy a shirt that costs $65.12 before the discount. He then uses a $16 gift certificate and the clerk applies 12% sales tax. What is the final cost of the shirt after all the steps are applied? Express your answer to the nearest hundredth. 
 
Solution: 
When there is a discount that is 25% off, the original price is going to be 75% times the original price. Therefore, 75% of $65.12 is $48.84. Next, subtracting $16, we obtain $32.84. Finally, applying 12% sales tax, we get $32.84 x 112% (since original price is added to the sales tax "price") which is $36.7808. This rounded to the nearest hundredth is $36.78.

Assignment 1: 

Painted Cube Problems

Visualization of the Painted Cube Problems 

It's more fun if you dig out Legos or Unit Cubes and just build some cubes (and later rectangular prism) 
and spend some time observing how it works. 

Assignment 2:

Review special right triangle, Pythagorean triples, theorem :

30-60-90 , 45-45-90 special right triangle angle ratios

Dimensional Change

Inscribed and Circumscribed Circle Radius of an Equilateral Triangle


Monday, June 11, 2012

Painted Cube Problems: Beginning Level

Please refrain yourself from checking the answers too soon. Use Lego blocks, unit cubes, or Rubik's cubes to help you think. If you are really stuck, check out this link on painted cube problems.

Please comment and help me make my blog more user friendly. Thanks a lot!! 

Painted Cube Problem, competition math, problem solving by Mrs. Lin

Answer Key to the Painted Cube Problem