Difference between revisions of "ITest"
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It consists of 25 multiple-choice questions (with 1 answer choice on the first problem, 2 on the second, etc.), 25 short-answer questions, and 10 Ultimate questions, which are much like relay questions in that each Ultimate question depends on the answer to the previous ones. There are 4 Tiebreaker proof questions as well. | It consists of 25 multiple-choice questions (with 1 answer choice on the first problem, 2 on the second, etc.), 25 short-answer questions, and 10 Ultimate questions, which are much like relay questions in that each Ultimate question depends on the answer to the previous ones. There are 4 Tiebreaker proof questions as well. | ||
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+ | ==Resources== | ||
+ | *[[iTest Problems and Solutions]] on the [[AoPSWiki]]. | ||
==External links== | ==External links== |
Revision as of 15:58, 18 November 2007
- The title of this article has been iTest due to technical restrictions. The correct title should be capitalized.
The iTest (formerly the American High School Internet Mathematics Competition) is a team-based math competition testing high school students on algebra, geometry, pre-calculus, probability, logic, and other mathematical topics typically encountered in a high school mathematics curriculum (excluding calculus).
It consists of 25 multiple-choice questions (with 1 answer choice on the first problem, 2 on the second, etc.), 25 short-answer questions, and 10 Ultimate questions, which are much like relay questions in that each Ultimate question depends on the answer to the previous ones. There are 4 Tiebreaker proof questions as well.
Resources
- iTest Problems and Solutions on the AoPSWiki.
External links
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