South Area Solomon Schechter Day School

Middle School Advanced Mathematics


MathCounts Math Team Competition Format

    The competition is done in two individual phases and one team phase.  Each student does Phase I and Phase II individually, and each team of four students does Phase III.

Phase I:  A 40 minute, 30 problem test, where calculators are not allowed.  The questions are relatively short, but most have both a brute force method and an elegant method of solution.  Using elegant methods allows a student to save time for the harder questions that come toward the end.
Sample Problem:  What is the greatest number of possible points of intersection for eight distinct lines in a plane?

Phase II:  A 4-part, 8 problem test, with two problems per part.  Students are allowed 6 minutes for each part.  These questions tend to be longer and more involved problems, often incorporating a calculation.  Calculators are allowed for this phase.
Sample Problem:  Two distinct numbers are selected simulataneously and at random from the set {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}.  What is the probability that their product is an even number?  Express your answer as a common fraction.

Phase III:  A 20 minute team phase, where each team of four students works together on a group of ten problems. 
Sample Problem:  The measures of the four interior angles of a quadrilateral are x, 2x, x+20 and x+40 degrees.  How many degrees are in the measure of the smallest interior angle of the quadrilateral?

Scoring

The total score for each individual is the sum of the Phase I score and twice the Phase II score, giving a maximum of 30 + 2x8 = 46.
The team score is the average of the four individual total scores, plus twice the Phase III score, giving a maximum of 46 + 2x10 = 66.

The Countdown Round and Final Results

The team's score is ranked with respect to the other teams, and the top three teams in our region earn trophies and the right to move on to the state level competition.   The individual scores are ranked against the other individual scores, and the top ten scores among all the schools compete in a head to head exciting Jeopardy-like countdown round.  Two students compete at a time, starting with numbers 9 and 10.   Questions appear on a screen and the first to buzz in with the three correct answers stays alive for the next round, and number 8 is brought into compete etc.  Calculators are not allowed, but scrap paper and pencils are allowed.  The pace is frantic, and the excitement intense.  Usually each problem is answered in less than a few seconds.   When the number 1 scoring student is finally brought in to compete, the winner of that round concludes the competition.  The last three individuals to have survived win prizes and trophies.    The national level countdown round is covered by ESPN, and shown in an hour long special. 

Sample Problem:  What is the greatest integer value of n such that 3n <  10,000?


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