ka April Highlights and 2025 AoPS Online Class Information
jlacosta0
Apr 2, 2025
Spring is in full swing and summer is right around the corner, what are your plans? At AoPS Online our schedule has new classes starting now through July, so be sure to keep your skills sharp and be prepared for the Fall school year! Check out the schedule of upcoming classes below.
WOOT early bird pricing is in effect, don’t miss out! If you took MathWOOT Level 2 last year, no worries, it is all new problems this year! Our Worldwide Online Olympiad Training program is for high school level competitors. AoPS designed these courses to help our top students get the deep focus they need to succeed in their specific competition goals. Check out the details at this link for all our WOOT programs in math, computer science, chemistry, and physics.
Looking for summer camps in math and language arts? Be sure to check out the video-based summer camps offered at the Virtual Campus that are 2- to 4-weeks in duration. There are middle and high school competition math camps as well as Math Beasts camps that review key topics coupled with fun explorations covering areas such as graph theory (Math Beasts Camp 6), cryptography (Math Beasts Camp 7-8), and topology (Math Beasts Camp 8-9)!
Prealgebra 1
Sunday, Apr 13 - Aug 10
Tuesday, May 13 - Aug 26
Thursday, May 29 - Sep 11
Sunday, Jun 15 - Oct 12
Monday, Jun 30 - Oct 20
Wednesday, Jul 16 - Oct 29
Introduction to Algebra A
Monday, Apr 7 - Jul 28
Sunday, May 11 - Sep 14 (1:00 - 2:30 pm ET/10:00 - 11:30 am PT)
Wednesday, May 14 - Aug 27
Friday, May 30 - Sep 26
Monday, Jun 2 - Sep 22
Sunday, Jun 15 - Oct 12
Thursday, Jun 26 - Oct 9
Tuesday, Jul 15 - Oct 28
Introduction to Counting & Probability
Wednesday, Apr 16 - Jul 2
Thursday, May 15 - Jul 31
Sunday, Jun 1 - Aug 24
Thursday, Jun 12 - Aug 28
Wednesday, Jul 9 - Sep 24
Sunday, Jul 27 - Oct 19
Introduction to Number Theory
Thursday, Apr 17 - Jul 3
Friday, May 9 - Aug 1
Wednesday, May 21 - Aug 6
Monday, Jun 9 - Aug 25
Sunday, Jun 15 - Sep 14
Tuesday, Jul 15 - Sep 30
Introduction to Algebra B
Wednesday, Apr 16 - Jul 30
Tuesday, May 6 - Aug 19
Wednesday, Jun 4 - Sep 17
Sunday, Jun 22 - Oct 19
Friday, Jul 18 - Nov 14
Introduction to Geometry
Wednesday, Apr 23 - Oct 1
Sunday, May 11 - Nov 9
Tuesday, May 20 - Oct 28
Monday, Jun 16 - Dec 8
Friday, Jun 20 - Jan 9
Sunday, Jun 29 - Jan 11
Monday, Jul 14 - Jan 19
Intermediate: Grades 8-12
Intermediate Algebra
Monday, Apr 21 - Oct 13
Sunday, Jun 1 - Nov 23
Tuesday, Jun 10 - Nov 18
Wednesday, Jun 25 - Dec 10
Sunday, Jul 13 - Jan 18
Thursday, Jul 24 - Jan 22
MATHCOUNTS/AMC 8 Basics
Wednesday, Apr 16 - Jul 2
Friday, May 23 - Aug 15
Monday, Jun 2 - Aug 18
Thursday, Jun 12 - Aug 28
Sunday, Jun 22 - Sep 21
Tues & Thurs, Jul 8 - Aug 14 (meets twice a week!)
MATHCOUNTS/AMC 8 Advanced
Friday, Apr 11 - Jun 27
Sunday, May 11 - Aug 10
Tuesday, May 27 - Aug 12
Wednesday, Jun 11 - Aug 27
Sunday, Jun 22 - Sep 21
Tues & Thurs, Jul 8 - Aug 14 (meets twice a week!)
AMC 10 Problem Series
Friday, May 9 - Aug 1
Sunday, Jun 1 - Aug 24
Thursday, Jun 12 - Aug 28
Tuesday, Jun 17 - Sep 2
Sunday, Jun 22 - Sep 21 (1:00 - 2:30 pm ET/10:00 - 11:30 am PT)
Monday, Jun 23 - Sep 15
Tues & Thurs, Jul 8 - Aug 14 (meets twice a week!)
AMC 10 Final Fives
Sunday, May 11 - Jun 8
Tuesday, May 27 - Jun 17
Monday, Jun 30 - Jul 21
AMC 12 Problem Series
Tuesday, May 27 - Aug 12
Thursday, Jun 12 - Aug 28
Sunday, Jun 22 - Sep 21
Wednesday, Aug 6 - Oct 22
Introduction to Programming with Python
Thursday, May 22 - Aug 7
Sunday, Jun 15 - Sep 14 (1:00 - 2:30 pm ET/10:00 - 11:30 am PT)
Tuesday, Jun 17 - Sep 2
Monday, Jun 30 - Sep 22
Every day, I will try to post a new problem for you all to solve! If you want to post a daily problem, you can! :)
Please hide solutions and answers, hints are fine though! :)
The first problem is:
[quote=March 21st Problem]Alice flips a fair coin until she gets 2 heads in a row, or a tail and then a head. What is the probability that she stopped after 2 heads in a row? Express your answer as a common fraction.[/quote]
Past Problems!
[quote=March 21st Problem]Alice flips a fair coin until she gets 2 heads in a row, or a tail and then a head. What is the probability that she stopped after 2 heads in a row? Express your answer as a common fraction.[/quote] Answer
[quote=March 22nd Problem]In a best out of 5 math tournament, 2 teams compete to solve math problems, with each of the teams having a 50% chance of winning each round. The tournament ends when one team wins 3 rounds. What is the probability that the tournament will end before the fifth round? Express your answer as a common fraction.[/quote] Answer
[quote=March 23rd Problem]The equations of and intersect at the point . What is the value of ?[/quote] Answer
[quote=March 24th Problem]Anthony rolls two fair six sided dice. What is the sum of all the different possible products of his rolls?[/quote] Answer
[quote=March 25th Problem]If , find the value of .[/quote] Answer
[quote=March 26th Problem]There is a group of 6 friends standing in line. However, 3 of them don't want to stand next to each other. In how many ways can they stand in line?[/quote] Answer
[quote=March 27th Problem]Two real numbers, and are chosen from 0 to 1. What is the probability that their positive difference is more than ?[/quote] Answer
[quote=March 28th Problem]What is the least possible value of the expression ?[/quote] Answer
Note that this is in no way trying to slander people who qualified through states with lower cutoffs. It is to compare cutoffs from 2022-2025. Qualifying nationals in any state is an exceptional achievement.
All credit goes to @peace09 for compiling previous years.
Additionally, thanks to @ethan2011/@mathkiddus for the template.
Tier colors have been removed as per the nationals' server requests.
For those asking about the removal of the tiers, I'd like to quote Jason himself:
[quote=peace09]
learn from my mistakes
[/quote]
When I had less than 25 posts on AoPS, I saw many people create threads about them getting 1000th posts. I thought I would never hit 1000 posts, but here we are, this is my 1000th post.
As a lot of users like to do, I'll write my math story:
Daycare
I figured out I loved math when I was in daycare at the age of around 4. At the end of the "school year," I was already skip counting by 9s until 90!
Preschool
Ngl, during my one year at preschool, my math level probably got worse.
Kindergarten
My practice of skip counting from daycare was paying off. We were doing this activity where we counted items in rows and columns, but I could just multiply as a shortcut. I also started grinding Beast Academy!
Which at the time didn't have Level 1
First Grade
I finished all of Beast Academy. Yes, including Level 5. Then, I started grinding khanacademy.
Second Grade
I learned how to multiply and divide fractions on khanacademy. Other than this, my second grade year was insignificant.
Third Grade
Same as preschool, ngl, during this year, my math level got so much worse.
Fourth Grade
I figured out that one of my classmates was in the Intermediate Algebra class, and I wanted to be more like him, so I started doing AoPS. I started off with Prealgebra, which was pretty easy overall. This was when I started to realize I hated graphing.
Fifth Grade
My classmate from fourth grade was taking the "High School Math Contests" course on AoPS, so this year, I decided to take both the "Introduction to Algebra" and the "Introduction to Geometry" classes.
Sixth Grade
I started taking the "Intermediate Algebra" course on AoPS. At around week 14, my dad thought that I wasn't ready for this class, so he enrolled me in the "Introduction to Counting and Probability" self-paced class because if I'm being honest here, I'm worse at Counting and Probability than I am at Algebra 2. This is where I am now. :)
In conclusion, AoPS has helped me improve my math. I have also made many new friends on AoPS!
Finally, I would like to say thank you to all the new friends I made and all the instructors on AoPS that taught me!
Minor side note, but
Sorry if this was uninteresting or smth like that. I am not responsible :) :evilgrin: