Difference between revisions of "Michigan Mathematics Prize Competition"

Line 1: Line 1:
 
== Overview ==
 
== Overview ==
  
:The Michigan Mathematics Prize Competition (MMPC) is a high-school level contest (although middle and elementary school kids can also take it) with two parts.  Part I consists of a 40-question multiple-choice test.  Top finishers of this round are selected to take Part II, which is a harder 5-question examSome of these are proofs.
+
:'''The Michigan Math Prize Competition''' ('''MMPC''') is a high-school level [[mathematics competition]] (although middle schoolers can take it) with two parts.  Part I is a 40 question, 100 minute multiple choice test.  Top 1000 finishers of this round are selected to take Part II, which is a harder 5-question proof testThe top 100 finishers of Part II are honored at an awards banquet every year.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
== Dates ==
 +
The Part I will occur on October 11, 2006
 +
 
 +
The Part II will occur on December 6, 2006.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
== Resources ==
 +
* [http://gauss.math.oakland.edu/mmpc/index.html MMPC homepage]
 +
* [[Michigan mathematics competitions]]
 +
* [[Mathematics competitions resources]]
 +
[[Category:Mathematics competitions]]

Revision as of 17:10, 5 October 2006

Overview

The Michigan Math Prize Competition (MMPC) is a high-school level mathematics competition (although middle schoolers can take it) with two parts. Part I is a 40 question, 100 minute multiple choice test. Top 1000 finishers of this round are selected to take Part II, which is a harder 5-question proof test. The top 100 finishers of Part II are honored at an awards banquet every year.


Dates

The Part I will occur on October 11, 2006

The Part II will occur on December 6, 2006.


Resources