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k a June Highlights and 2025 AoPS Online Class Information
jlacosta   0
Jun 2, 2025
Congratulations to all the mathletes who competed at National MATHCOUNTS! If you missed the exciting Countdown Round, you can watch the video at this link. Are you interested in training for MATHCOUNTS or AMC 10 contests? How would you like to train for these math competitions in half the time? We have accelerated sections which meet twice per week instead of once starting on July 8th (7:30pm ET). These sections fill quickly so enroll today!

[list][*]MATHCOUNTS/AMC 8 Basics
[*]MATHCOUNTS/AMC 8 Advanced
[*]AMC 10 Problem Series[/list]
For those interested in Olympiad level training in math, computer science, physics, and chemistry, be sure to enroll in our WOOT courses before August 19th to take advantage of early bird pricing!

Summer camps are starting this month at the Virtual Campus in math and language arts that are 2 - to 4 - weeks in duration. Spaces are still available - don’t miss your chance to have a transformative summer experience. 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)!

Be sure to mark your calendars for the following upcoming events:
[list][*]June 5th, Thursday, 7:30pm ET: Open Discussion with Ben Kornell and Andrew Sutherland, Art of Problem Solving's incoming CEO Ben Kornell and CPO Andrew Sutherland host an Ask Me Anything-style chat. Come ask your questions and get to know our incoming CEO & CPO!
[*]June 9th, Monday, 7:30pm ET, Game Jam: Operation Shuffle!, Come join us to play our second round of Operation Shuffle! If you enjoy number sense, logic, and a healthy dose of luck, this is the game for you. No specific math background is required; all are welcome.[/list]
Our full course list for upcoming classes is below:
All classes run 7:30pm-8:45pm ET/4:30pm - 5:45pm PT unless otherwise noted.

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0 replies
jlacosta
Jun 2, 2025
0 replies
Polar Math Olympiad!
heheman   5
N 40 minutes ago by Maximilian113
Hello everyone your invited to the 1st weekly Polar Math Olympiad!!

Registration Form: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1vjeFzYwTBOvWmA1nn8nOQ5CR9DA5DxdRjSs6ffcWrDw/edit

Test link: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1FSMpkhRYDIOQPZQJC2URJaj9nMHDeNSTno51s_DTrE8/edit?tab=t.0

Submission Form: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1vjeFzYwTBOvWmAe1n8nOQ5CR9DA5DxdRjSs6ffcWrDw/edit

Backup: [url]file:///C:/Users/goonboy/Downloads/PolarMathOlympiad.pdf[/url]

Hope you enjoy my weekly contest!

5 replies
heheman
2 hours ago
Maximilian113
40 minutes ago
Mustang Math Recruitment is Open!
MustangMathTournament   24
N 2 hours ago by golden_star_123
The Interest Form for joining Mustang Math is open!

Hello all!

We're Mustang Math, and we are currently recruiting for the 2025-2026 year! If you are a high school or college student and are passionate about promoting an interest in competition math to younger students, you should strongly consider filling out the following form: https://link.mustangmath.com/join. Every member in MM truly has the potential to make a huge impact, no matter your experience!

About Mustang Math

Mustang Math is a nonprofit organization of high school and college volunteers that is dedicated to providing middle schoolers access to challenging, interesting, fun, and collaborative math competitions and resources. Having reached over 4000 U.S. competitors and 1150 international competitors in our first six years, we are excited to expand our team to offer our events to even more mathematically inclined students.

PROJECTS
We have worked on various math-related projects. Our annual team math competition, Mustang Math Tournament (MMT) recently ran. We hosted 8 in-person competitions based in Washington, NorCal, SoCal, Illinois, Georgia, Massachusetts, Nevada and New Jersey, as well as an online competition run nationally. In total, we had almost 900 competitors, and the students had glowing reviews of the event. MMT International will once again be running later in August, and with it, we anticipate our contest to reach over a thousand students.

In our classes, we teach students math in fun and engaging math lessons and help them discover the beauty of mathematics. Our aspiring tech team is working on a variety of unique projects like our website and custom test platform. We also have a newsletter, which, combined with our social media presence, helps to keep the mathematics community engaged with cool puzzles, tidbits, and information about the math world! Our design team ensures all our merch and material is aesthetically pleasing.

Some highlights of this past year include 1000+ students in our classes, AMC10 mock with 150+ participants, our monthly newsletter to a subscriber base of 6000+, creating 8 designs for 800 pieces of physical merchandise, as well as improving our custom website (mustangmath.com, 20k visits) and test-taking platform (comp.mt, 6500+ users).

Why Join Mustang Math?

As a non-profit organization on the rise, there are numerous opportunities for volunteers to share ideas and suggest projects that they are interested in. Through our organizational structure, members who are committed have the opportunity to become a part of the leadership team. Overall, working in the Mustang Math team is both a fun and fulfilling experience where volunteers are able to pursue their passion all while learning how to take initiative and work with peers. We welcome everyone interested in joining!

More Information

To learn more, visit https://link.mustangmath.com/RecruitmentInfo. If you have any questions or concerns, please email us at contact@mustangmath.com.

https://link.mustangmath.com/join
24 replies
MustangMathTournament
May 24, 2025
golden_star_123
2 hours ago
[$26K+ in PRIZES AND IVY LEAGUE MENTORSHIP] AASF Youth Ambassador for Science
petfoo   4
N 3 hours ago by heheman
Hey everyone! Just made this post to share something that meant a lot to me last summer.

I participated in the Youth Ambassador for Science competition hosted by the Asian American Scholar Forum. It’s open to high school students (14–18), and it’s super simple (and free) to enter:

You make a short video about one of five Asian American science pioneers, post it on social media with their hashtag (#aasf_contest), and fill out a quick submission form.

What I got out of it last year:
[list][*] I won a $500 VISA gift card
[*] Got invited to the Asian American Pioneer Medal Symposium at Stanford University
[*]Met Fortune 500 CEOs (Founder of Zoom), professors from top schools (many from Princeton and Stanford), and even a Nobel Prize winner (current professor at Berkeley)
[*]And received 1-on-1 mentoring sessions with a Princeton professor[/list]

It was honestly one of the highlights of my summer. This year, I’m helping spread the word so more students can benefit.

If you’re into science, public speaking, social impact, or just want to connect with some inspiring people, I 100% recommend going for it.

:!: Deadline to apply: June 30, 2025
:arrow: More Info: aasforum.org/video-competition

p.s. i'm a rising freshman at one of the hypsm schools, so i'm sure the contest helped there as well :) have fun!
4 replies
petfoo
Wednesday at 3:27 PM
heheman
3 hours ago
AIME resources
senboy   3
N 5 hours ago by Evanlovemath
what are some good book books(apart from aops books) that would prepare me for AMC 10/12 and AIME prep. I am aiming for about 100 on the amc 10 and a 4-7 on the AIME
3 replies
senboy
Yesterday at 11:29 AM
Evanlovemath
5 hours ago
No more topics!
mohs of each oly
cowstalker   20
N Apr 28, 2025 by N3bula
what are the general concencus for the mohs of each of the problems on usajmo and usamo
20 replies
cowstalker
Mar 23, 2025
N3bula
Apr 28, 2025
mohs of each oly
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cowstalker
297 posts
#1
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what are the general concencus for the mohs of each of the problems on usajmo and usamo
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blueprimes
363 posts
#2
Y by
JMO: (5-10) 5 (15-20) -100 5 15
@below its negative
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Martin2001
170 posts
#3
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100 mohs for easy alg manip is wild
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awesomeming327.
1746 posts
#4 • 1 Y
Y by Jack_w
USAMO
0-10 / 20-35 / 0-30
0-5 / 20-30 / 30-50
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ScoutViolet
604 posts
#6
Y by
unbiased guy here, 5 5 15 (does it even make it) 5 10
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llddmmtt1
427 posts
#7
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jmo: 0 5 15 0 0 15
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Pomansq
12 posts
#8
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5 30 30
10 20 40
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vincentwant
1464 posts
#9
Y by
The time I took on p4 was 2/3 the time I took on p3. I'm not kidding.

Also I think p3 is 25 mohs. Both parts of the solution take some time and they don't share similar ideas.
This post has been edited 1 time. Last edited by vincentwant, Mar 23, 2025, 1:00 PM
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blueprimes
363 posts
#10
Y by
vincentwant wrote:
The time I took on p4 was 2/3 the time I took on p3. I'm not kidding.

Also I think p3 is 25 mohs. Both parts of the solution take some time and they don't share similar ideas.

I feel like the solution path for j3 is very motivated though if you just stick to the process of defining the valid sections that can be tiled then counting the paths. It's definitely not as convoluted as other 25M combo, so I think 15M makes a lot of sense.
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vincentwant
1464 posts
#11
Y by
blueprimes wrote:
vincentwant wrote:
The time I took on p4 was 2/3 the time I took on p3. I'm not kidding.

Also I think p3 is 25 mohs. Both parts of the solution take some time and they don't share similar ideas.

I feel like the solution path for j3 is very motivated though if you just stick to the process of defining the valid sections that can be tiled then counting the paths. It's definitely not as convoluted as other 25M combo, so I think 15M makes a lot of sense.

Both of these parts are fairly difficult and I think they're each 15-20 mohs in their own right. Also a lot of people did not solve this in contest even if they took little time on p1 and p2.
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blueprimes
363 posts
#12
Y by
As a comparison, USAMO 2022/1 is an example of a 25M combo. This problem is strikingly more difficult in my opinion, because first off it's very hard to start the problem, and there are several ways to approach the problem that seem plausible (global/local, induction, etc.)

J3 is a more streamlined and linear problem to solve, proving a construction for the "balanced" sections is not 15-20M in my opinion (there are very few ideas you can do here, inducting downwards seems the most natural) and feels like a <15M part. I agree with you that the computational part at the end (the $a_i + i$ substitution) is well-known but easy to get stumped on, so this is ~15M.
This post has been edited 1 time. Last edited by blueprimes, Mar 23, 2025, 1:48 PM
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vincentwant
1464 posts
#13 • 1 Y
Y by blueprimes
blueprimes wrote:
As a comparison, USAMO 2022/1 is an example of a 25M combo. This problem is strikingly more difficult in my opinion, because first off it's very hard to start the problem, and there are several ways to approach the problem that seem plausible (global/local, induction, etc.)

J3 is a more streamlined and linear problem to solve, proving a construction for the "balanced" sections is not 15-20M in my opinion (there are very few ideas you can do here, inducting downwards seems the most natural) and feels like a <15M part. I agree with you that the computational part at the end (the $a_i + i$ substitution) is well-known but easy to get stumped on, so this is ~15M.

I've solved USAMO 2022/1, and I found this problem to be comparable in difficulty
notes on 2022 U1
I also found this to be harder than USAMO 2020/2, which is 20M.
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blueprimes
363 posts
#14 • 1 Y
Y by vincentwant
While I still stand by my opinion that the methodology behind this problem is very natural, at the end of the day difficulty is subjective especially when it comes to combinatorics. If we're going based off of Evan Chen's ratings (which are arguably inflated in some cases) then yes I completely agree this problem is harder than USAMO 2020/2 (which is a 20M) which I guess directly makes this a 25M to some degree.
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Firebreather14
92 posts
#15
Y by
(i did not take jmo, so take this with a grain of salt)

JMO: 5 (0-5) 20 0 5 (15-20)
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KevinChen_Yay
242 posts
#16
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10 5 25 5 5 15 in my opinion
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aliz
163 posts
#17
Y by
for jmo
551501515
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arfekete
259 posts
#18
Y by
My personal AMO rating predictions:
5/25/30, 5/15/45 (Bias: I solved 1, 4, 5 and likely partials on 2)
Range of ratings i've seen:
0-10/20-30/20-30
0-5/15-30/40-45
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InftyByond
210 posts
#19
Y by
arfekete wrote:
My personal AMO rating predictions:
5/25/30, 5/15/45 (Bias: I solved 1, 4, 5 and likely partials on 2)
Range of ratings i've seen:
0-10/20-30/20-30
0-5/15-30/40-45

Amo 2 is definitely harder than Amo 3 and im speaking as an alg main
Reverse Amo 2 and 3 rating?
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BS2012
1058 posts
#20
Y by
vincentwant wrote:
Also a lot of people did not solve this in contest even if they took little time on p1 and p2.
me
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aliz
163 posts
#21
Y by
aliz wrote:
for jmo
551501515
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N3bula
302 posts
#22
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5 30 30 5 20 45
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