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2003 USAMO Teachers Manual
I. The USAMO _ General Information The 2003 USA Mathematical Olympiad (USAMO) is to be given in your school, and is scheduled for Tuesday & Wednesday, April 29 & 30, 2003. The only students who will be invited to take the USAMO are those whose test scores qualify, and are citizens or permanent residents of the USA, permanent residents are identified as those in possession of a USA Immigration Office issued "Green Card". The format for the USAMO will be identical to the format used for the International Mathematical Olympiad. The Olympiad will consist of six essay-proof questions to be solved over two days in nine hours, three questions for 4.5 hours on Tuesday, and three questions for 4.5 hours on Wednesday . The top 12 scoring students on the USAMO will be invited to attend an award ceremony held in Washington, D.C., June 22-23, 2003. The USA International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO) Team will be chosen at the Mathematical Olympiad Summer Program (MOSP, June 15-July 5, 2003) after further testing Arrangements will be made by the Canadian Mathematical Olympiad Committee for some Canadian students to unofficially take the USAMO. It is recommended that students selected for the USAMO practice on prior year examinations. For your convenience a USAMO Publication Order Form S-IV (page 15) is found in the student section of this manual, . The selection of the USAMO participants will be made on or before Monday, April 14. All selected students and their School Manager will receive a letter of invitation, to be mailed out during the week of April 14-20, or before. Please do not inquire about the USAMO invitations with anyone except the AMC Director, and do not phone prior to Thursday, April 17. The USAMO must be taken on the official days under the supervision of a certified professional educator--absolutely no exceptions. It is possible, however, for a student to take the test under the supervision of a teacher at a site other than the student's school for valid reasons. The student's teacher must call the AMC national office for permission. Selection for the USAMO will be made according to the follwing rules:
In advising students who desire to be selected for the USAMO whether to take the AMC 12 level contests or the AMC 10 level contests, it will be to their advantage to take the AMC 12 level contests. II. Preliminary Information for the Proctor The USAMO Committee has a very tight schedule. We grade the papers on May 2, 3 and 4, posting results on May 7, 2003. Your help is vital. The USAMO is to be given on Tuesday, April 29 and Wednesday, April 30, 2003, in two 4.5-hour sessions. The first session (Problems 1, 2, 3) is scheduled for Tuesday, April 29 and will begin at 12:30 p.m. EDT and end at 5:00 p.m. EDT or equivalent in your time zone. The second session (Problems 4, 5, 6) is scheduled for Wednesday, April 30 and will begin at 12:30 p.m. EDT and end at 5:00 p.m. EDT or equivalent in your time zone. The 9-hour time limit is to be strictly enforced. Students should come prepared with a sack lunch and/or snacks due to no lunch break during the exam (Exceptions will be made for restroom breaks). Be sure that in the room you reserve for the exam, the student(s) will have ample working space and freedom from interruptions. The student(s) must be under supervision during the entire course of the exam and only one student at a time may leave for restroom breaks. If you have more than one student who qualified, be certain there is adequate space between them. You will find the following materials included in your AIME/USAMO Teachers Manual or on our website at www.unl.edu/amc :
III. Information for the 2 Days of the USAMO Please note this year's USAMO 2 day format: and the 4.5 hour length both days, given at the following times:
If requested, you may let the participant have unmarked scratch paper. If, for any reason, the student submits scratch paper instead of, or in addition to, an answer form, the Problem Number and the Student Number, but NOT the student's name or school, must be on each page submitted. All papers must be anonymous at the time of the grading. You are not permitted to answer any questions about the test and should ensure that no participant has the opportunity to talk to any other student while the exam is in progress. No notes, books, headphones, slide rules, mathematical tables, calculators or calculator watches are allowed during the exam. The only instruments permitted are writing and drawing instruments (ruler, compass, protractor, graph paper, carbon paper). Recent eligible immigrants who are taking the USAMO for the first time are permitted to use a non-technical translation dictionary during the exam. However, you must examine and keep the dictionary in your possession for the 24 hours preceding the USAMO, and you must announce to any other participants that the student has been given special permission to use the dictionary. Please list the name(s) of any student planning to use a non-technical translation dictionary on page T-II. Neither the problems nor the student's solutions should be machine copied. The USAMO is copyrighted. Instruct the participant to cease writing at the end of each exam session. Session 1 ends at 5:00 p.m. EDT (or equivalent in your time zone) on April 29, 2003 and session 2 ends at 5:00 p.m. EDT (or equivalent in your time zone) on April 30, 2003. At the end of each session instruct your students to double-check that the student Number on their answer forms matches the number assigned in the official invitation letter. Next, immediately Fax (208/978-9117) the papers to the AMC Office. If you have any questions concerning this exam, you may call or Fax: AMC Office If for some reason the student or school cancels participation, call us immediately (1-800-527-3690). The top 12 scoring students on the USAMO will be invited to attend an award ceremony held in Washington, D.C. June 22-23, 2003. Activities include a reception at the Mathematical Association of America Headquarters, a tour of the National Science Foundation, meetings with members of Congress, a reception at the National Academy of Sciences, and a celebration dinner with the mathematical sciences community at the U.S. Department of State Building. VI Mathematical Olympiad Summer Program The top 12 scoring students on the USAMO will be invited to attend the Mathematical Olympiad Summer Program regardless of grade. In addition to the top 12 USAMO winners, an additional 12-18 participants not graduating from high school, who are current juniors and below, will also be invited to participate in the Mathematical Olympiad Summer Program (MOSP). The Mathematical Olympiad Summer Program will be held on the campus of the University of Nebraska - Lincoln June 15-July 5, 2003. Students will be treated to classes on advanced mathematical topics, special guest speakers, mathematical contest training, and related social and mathematical activities. During the first week of MOSP a final "IMO" type exam will be given to the top 12 USAMO students with the goal of identifying the USA IMO team. This exam will replicate an actual IMO and will consist of 6 problems to be solved over two 4 1/2 hour sessions. The 12 equally weighted problems (6 on USAMO and 6 on this exam) will determine the tentative USA Team. In order to assure that the strongest possible team has been formed, the MOSP Director/IMO Team Leader reserves the right to appoint up to one IMO team member. This appointment would happen only in a circumstance where a student's performance during the first two weeks of MOSP clearly surpasses that of an existing team member. VII. The International Mathematical Olympiad Each year (Japan in 2003,Greece in 2004) the USA sends a team of six students to the International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO). Six of the top students on the 2003 USAMO will constitute the U.S.A.'s team, and the next two will be the alternates.
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