U of I Math Contests Webpage
www.math.uiuc.edu/contests.html

News

[To receive news and announcements about contest activities at the U of I, sign up for the Putnam Newsletter.]

The William Lowell Putnam Competition

The William Lowell Putnam Competition is an annual student math competition sponsored by the Mathematical Association of America. More than 2000 students from colleges and universities in the United States and Canada participate in this contest each year. The Putnam competition is held simultaneously at participating universities, usually on the first Saturday of December.

The Putnam competition consists of a morning session and an afternoon session of three hours each. In each session, six problems are to be solved. The problems are graded on a 0 - 10 point scale, for a maximal score of 120 points. The problems are challenging and require considerable ingenuity and insight, but little technical knowledge beyond high school mathematics. It is extremely rare that a contestant solves all 12 problems. For example, in the 1996 Putnam competition, the highest score was 98 points, and a score of 10 (the equivalent of a single problem solved correctly) would have placed a contestant among the top third of all 2400 participants! The highest ranking participants from the UIUC in recent years have earned scores in the 40 - 60 point range and ranked in the top 100.

The Putnam competition is open to all full time undergraduate students; for details on how to enter click on the link below. In addition to the individual competition, there is also a team competition among participating colleges. The team rank of a college is determined by the scores of three participants from that college who have to be named in advance. The team members will, of course, still be ranked as individual contestants. The 25 highest scoring individuals and the five highest scoring teams receive monetary awards. The UIUC team has not made it into the money ranks in recent history, but there is always time for a first! (The highest rank for the UIUC team in the past 20 years was 8th.)



The U of I Undergraduate Math Contest

This is a locally organized problems contest, held in the latter part of the Spring semester. It is similar in format and content to the Putnam competition, but the problems are easier. Until 1994, the contest was split into two separate contests, an "Orange Contest" for students in calculus, and a "Blue Contest" for students who had completed the calculus sequence. Since 1995, the two contests have been consolidated into a single contest, called the U of I Undergraduate Math Contest. The highest ranking individuals in this contest receive prizes (including a top prize of $250) and are recognized at a special awards ceremony.

The U of I Putnam Newsletter

The U of I Putnam Newsletter is an email newsletter containing announcements about the Putnam competition and other contest-related activities at the U of I, and a "Problem of the Week." The mailing list for the newsletter is maintained by Professor Hildebrand; send email to ajh@uiuc.edu to be put on this mailing list.
Note: This is a local newsletter, with announcements of local events and activities that would be of little interest to those not at the U of I. To keep the mailing list manageable, it is restricted to U of I students and faculty.

Problem of the Week

Click on the above link for the UIUC "Problem of the Week".
Last modified: Sat 15 Mar 2008 04:22:57 PM CDT A.J. Hildebrand