North East Asian Mathematics Competition

The North East Asian Mathematics Competition (NEAMC) is a three-day mathematics competition held in a predesignated location in North East Asia.

It is a qualifying competition by Competition Academy for invitation to the World Mathematics Championships.

General information


Location

The location of the NEAMC changes annually. There are now at least two venues held annually and any institution may host it (with significant discounted perks).

Eligibility

[1]The Senior level is open to all youths in Grade 12 (Year 13) or below during the month of the event.

The Junior level is open to all youths in Grade 9 (Year 10) or below during the month of the event.

The Prime Plus level is open to all youths in Grade 7 (Year 8) or below during the month of the event.

The competition

History

SEAMC and NEAMC are three-day events for school students located in South East and North East Asia, respectively. Participants work alone and in teams, as well as listen to mathematician guest speakers.

SEAMC was conceived at the turn of the millennium by Steve Warry, a teacher at Alice Smith School in Kuala Lumpur who believed that mathematics could be a spectator sport. In pursuit of this, he organised the South East Asian Mathematics Competition (SEAMC) for March 2001, although he died a week prior to the competition. NEAMC was organised in February 2014 by Malcolm Coad of Nanjing International School, China as a parallel event to SEAMC. Haese Mathematics are proud partners of the event since conception[2]

Format

SEAMC, NEAMC and all other WMC qualifying competitions have:

  • Three days of engagement
  • Six skills categories for prizes
  • The best sum ranking across all rounds win

School teams engage within the Communication skills rounds.

The Collaboration skills rounds are in buddy teams of three (the Open round involves 2 buddy teams working together). The Challenge are skills rounds undertaken as individuals.

Three skills rounds are (subject specific skills and procedures) knowledge based, three are (plan and execute) strategy focused and three depend upon (new and imaginative ideas) creativity.

So each strategy, creative and knowledge skill category is engaged in alone, in school teams and in buddy teams.

Prizes

  • All participants receive a transcript of relative attainment in each of the rounds.
  • The highest ranked individuals in each category receive medals.
  • The highest ranked individuals across all rounds receive medals.
  • The best ranked school team across all rounds receive the NEAMC Senior Cup or NEAMC Junior Cup respectively.

Results

Past team winners[3]

  • 2017 – Seoul International School, S Korea[4]
  • 2016 – North London Collegiate School Jeju, S Korea[5]
  • 2015 – Seoul International School, S Korea[6]
  • 2014 – Seoul International School, S Korea[7]

Past individual winners[8]

  • 2017 – Booyeon Brian Choi, Seoul International School
  • 2016 – Subin Rachael Kim, North London Collegiate School Jeju[9]
  • 2015 – Zie Ho Choi, British International School, Pudong[10]
  • 2014 – Diana Kim, Seoul International School

References

  1. Academy, Competition. "Qualifying competitions". Competition Academy. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
  2. https://www.haesemathematics.com.au/news_items/neamc-2017
  3. http://maths.competition.ac/pages/past-winners-neamc
  4. http://www.nordangliaeducation.com/en/our-schools/vietnam/hanoi/bvis/article/2017/3/10/north-east-asian-mathematics-competition-tokyo-japan
  5. http://www.internationalschool.info/wiss-hosts-the-north-east-asian-mathematics-competition/
  6. https://siskorea.org/4378/north-east-asian-mathematics-competition-results-from-nanjing/
  7. https://www.facebook.com/pg/BC-Collegiate-Canada-149135661821651/photos/?tab=album&album_id=595252263876653
  8. http://maths.competition.ac/pages/past-winners-neamc
  9. http://www.dbis.edu.hk/media/news/article/337/North-East-Asian-Mathematics-Competition
  10. https://siskorea.org/4378/north-east-asian-mathematics-competition-results-from-nanjing/
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.