How To Lead A Math Club
How To Lead A Math Club
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Table of Contents
Introduction to Math Club .................................................................................................... 3 Outline of Math Club Essentials ............................................................................................ 4 Basic Tips and Tricks.............................................................................................................. 5 Getting started What do I need?....................................................................................................... 6 Finding a place and time to meet ............................................................................ 6 Recruiting students to Math Club ............................................................................ 8 When should the first meeting be? ......................................................................... 8 What to do at the first meeting ............................................................................... 8 Establishing organizational procedures ................................................................... 9
During the Year Recruiting during the year ....................................................................................... 11 Running a meeting ................................................................................................... 11 Meeting models ....................................................................................................... 12 Practicing with other local teams ............................................................................ 14 Be organized ............................................................................................................ 14
Competitions Registration and transportation .............................................................................. 15 Know the rules and format ...................................................................................... 15 Have fun ................................................................................................................... 15 Typical Competition Schedule ................................................................................. 16 Competition Outline ................................................................................................ 16
During the Summer ............................................................................................................... 17 Appendix Online Resources .................................................................................................... 18 Sample handouts .................................................................................................... 19 Further Reading ...................................................................................................... 19
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As former and current Math Club leaders, we have written and compiled this Starter Pack for your informational purposes as well as for the purpose of hopefully expanding your knowledge of the opportunities that exist for Math Club in your statewide community. Our goal with this Starter Pack is to provide you with a brief and informative guide that will aid you in the process of running a math club and provide you with helpful information, advice and samples. If you havent done so already, please take the time to explore our website, www.wastudentmath.org, to become acquainted with all the Math Club-related resources we provide for your general use, free of cost.
Here is our brief take on what Math Club is and why we believe it is both useful and rewarding: Math club is a fun and competitive activity that any student can participate in. It is a great way for students to develop intuitive thinking skills and learn new types of math. Students will not only learn new material, but will apply their previous knowledge from school to fun and challenging problems. Furthermore, they will learn to view math not as a set of rules or guidelines, but as an art. Math is a subject full of creativity and opportunity that many students enjoy. Besides the academic benefits, math club is also a great way to meet new people and develop teamwork skills.
Well end this brief introduction here and cut to the chase. We hope you enjoy reading and using this starter pack as much as we enjoyed creating it! Please contact our officers online if you have any questions, suggestions, or other feedback.
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Do
o o o o o o Inform teachers and principals Have snacks Allow socializing time Make it fun Play games Get parental support o o o
Do Not
Allow intimidation/bragging Let group get too crowded; split into separate rooms if necessary Allow excessive noise/disruption
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Getting Started
What do I need?
Core Members Any successful math club will need to have a core group of members who attend nearly all club meetings. A core group does not have to be sizable in order to be effective; many successful math club programs have around 3-8 students as core members. These members will take on leadership roles in a large club. A Steady Meeting Time and Location Most math clubs are held after school in a designated classroom, with meetings generally lasting around one hour each. Keep the meeting time and location consistent after establishing at the beginning of the year in order to optimize attendance rates. Math clubs generally meet once a week, although some meet twice a week and some meet monthly. Additional practices are generally held on weekends and are less formal some switch locations and are held at various team members houses. Decide upon which types of meetings (see page 12) are best for your individual club; it may take some experimentation before finding out what type your members like most. Skipping a few meetings is fine in order to accommodate to club members schedules and needs. Parental Support The importance of parental support cannot be overstated: the most successful programs have strong parent involvement and support to fuel their success. Enlist parent volunteers for help as early during the year as possible. One way to solicit support is to add parents to your club email thread to keep them updated of math club news events and needs. Supportive parents will not only take away much of the hassle of a club leaders job, but will also provide necessities such as transportation to and from competitions, snacks, and basic classroom supplies for club members. Parents can also be reliable sources of help during times of emergency to help with club procedures.
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Choosing an initial day of the week to meet is important, although this may change throughout the school year. Talk to other club leaders to determine what day will cause the least conflicts (but be assertive). In the event of a schedule conflict, remember that team members who are busy can still contribute greatly by attending just a few meetings. Also important is choosing the frequency of the club meetings. Although nearly all clubs meet on a weekly basis, it may be a better option in rare cases to meet twice a week or once every two weeks. One approach is to have the math club meet once a week/two weeks in the first month of school and increase the frequency of meetings as math competitions approach.
Think of ourselves as gardeners, not fishermen. Fishermen know what gets the fish. But a gardener provides the environment and enables plants to grow. With math team, dont try to just get the best students and win; instead, get as many students as you can, and do whatever is possible to make them better at math. - Ashley Reiter Start recruiting early in the year for best results. Some recruiting suggestions: Post flyers with attention-grabbing slogans or illustrations around the school. Ask permission from teachers to hang them up in classrooms and/or announce them in class. Prepare an informational handout to hand to parents early on in the school year. Curriculum night is a great time to do this. Remember to introduce yourself politely and in an unimposing manner, yet still be assertive and take the time to sell your math club program. Play to math club strengths and hook your audiences attention with stories, concrete examples/scenarios that they will find useful (i.e. team-bonding, tutoring, and competitive opportunities) Post intriguing math questions or puzzles around the school at popular locations Make a small presentation at the first school assembly possible having the student body know about the math club is very important Talk to individual students at other related clubs. Get your friends to join starting off with several familiar students in the math club is a great way to break any initial ice and form new relationships.
The one most important aspect of maintaining steady attendance that does not fade away within the first few weeks is to focus on making your math club an interesting, organized, and well-run organization. Although it may take a while, students will hear about your math club by word of mouth and attendance will grow steadily. Page 7
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Procedures Emphasized by the School Fill out initial paperwork and recruiting o Some schools require as many as twelve initial members to form a club. Craft a club constitution o See your local schools ASB for a sample club constitution Elect core officers o President, Vice President, Secretary, Treasurer Prepare a club budget o Most costs will be competition related, T-Shirts, transportation and books/magazines o Club income may include fundraisers and donations Plan ahead for transportation permission o Many school districts have many requirements regarding permission to go on school field trips and thus will need a good deal of paperwork to be filled out before each competition. If this is the case at your school, a good first step is to approach your principal, bookkeeper, and your ASB advisor for guidance. o In many cases, it is easier to ask for funding to get bus transportation (if possible), or simply require that students arrange their own transportation. o Notify your school administrators of competitions at least 20 days in advance. Plan ahead for event permission o If you plan to host an event at your school (i.e. inviting a guest speaker, hosting a mail-in competition), remember to fill out the necessary paperwork beforehand. o Hosting fundraisers requires paperwork as well. Consult your bookkeeper to guide you through this stage. A well-planned fundraiser can generate much-needed revenue for your math club, although funds are not absolutely necessary in order to run a math club. Take meeting minutes o Keep a short record log of who attended which meeting and for how long, as well as writing a short meeting summary of what occurred, to be sent out in your regular weekly emails. This task is usually managed by the club secretary.
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Have a math club binder to hold records, forms, and materials Send out regular emails to keep club members informed of events o Upcoming dates, reminders, and important information discussed Set up a math club website for convenient information exchange o A Facebook group or a blog are also viable alternatives Set up a club calendar with specific meeting agendas and objectives o Vary your meetings to make them fun: throw in a club pizza party, puzzle/game day, or movie day to keep things fun and reduce stress Delegate officer tasks and define them early on during the year o Initially, delegating work can be more work than doing the work by oneself, but as your new officers become acclimatized to your expectations, their work quality and speed will hopefully increase as their confidence and independence grows. Group collaboration is important in order for a club to run effectively once the leader leaves or graduates Briefly write up meeting agendas to be posted before each meeting Include results and accomplishments in regular emails Consider ordering club T-Shirts Add your email to helpful, math-related email threads to keep you updated and informed o Examples include: WSMA, Tom Norris (TJ), Tom Clymer, and Art of Problem Solving Start off your club meetings with warm-ups, and end your club meetings with further practice and/or homework. Establish club rules in order to keep meetings running smoothly (one person talking at a time, etc.) Bring in an empty shoebox with a rectangle cut out of the top lid to create your own Math Club Suggestions box to gather anonymous feedback.
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Running a meeting
While providing problems (and often food) for a math club is an important task for a math club leader, this is just one of many essentials at math club meetings. If prepared and planned out well in advance, your math club meetings will be more efficient, effective, and educational. However, running a math club meeting to be both informative and inspirational can be difficult without prior experience. Here are a few tips to keep things friendly and fun: Prepare a warm-up (a puzzle or a quick problem) to keep students thinking as they settle at the beginning of the meeting. The students can work individually or collaboratively. Once a solution to the warm-up has been presented by one of the students, the math club can begin, but allow no more than fifteen minutes to do the warm-up. If your teacher keeps a bell in the classroom, utilize it to let the students know when to stop or start something (i.e. a problem set, talking). This saves your voice and keeps blood pressure low. Encourage idle members to step up their participation levels. An effective way to do this is to get them involved in a group activity, to avoid singling them out. Be assertive and energetic, but avoid being aggressive or too energetic. Change the pace during the meetings to keep energy levels high. It is a good idea to incorporate short math breaks into your meeting times if your meeting is longer than 45 minutes. Keep students occupied during the break with snacks, or a short discussion about an upcoming event. If you have the fortune to be working with student officers, utilize their talents! Delegate leadership responsibilities to them to encourage them to think creatively for your club.
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Meeting Models
While many clubs succeed by running one meeting model consistently and effectively, you may want to vary your own meetings in order to keep student interest fresh while having your members learn and improve their math skills from all different sorts of angles. The largest and most popular math clubs in Washington generally have many team bonding activities and thus can encourage math club members of all levels to compete and participate. Indeed, one of the most common problems that math clubs face is to satisfy the needs of both the brilliantly talented math students as well as the newer math club members with less experience. A strategy you can use to combat this problem is to vary your meeting types and focus. The following is a list of common meeting models you may wish to try. Team Practice Team practices focus primarily on training students individual and team ability to solve problems under time pressure. Most problem rounds consist of around 15-20 team questions and around 3040 individual questions. It is essential to host many team practices before a competition in order to make sure that your math club members are familiar with the competition format and time limits. Many new students will become discouraged if they feel unprepared or intimidated at a competition by problems theyve never seen before. Take your problem sets directly from the competitions website: many competitions will post problems from competitions of the previous years. All competitions will have a general theme and focus on certain types of problems. Our website compiles a growing database of competition problems from past years posted legally for public, educational use. If the problem round or test is a team or individual test, have your students solve the problem round according to the specifications for each round. Thus, it is better to form teams ahead of time so that students become accustomed to practicing with the same team. Most competitions require four members to a team. Give the students a five minute warning and a one minute warning. Take the test with your math club if you havent done the problems before! Score each team/individual once the test is over. Allow students around five minutes to discuss amongst themselves which problems they got wrong and how to solve these problems. Go over as a club which problems gave students difficulty. To save time, dont go over the problems that some students miss because of careless errors. Go over the ones that students dont know how to do. It is a good idea to have students who solved these more difficult problems present their solutions in front of the club. If there is a large discrepancy in student ability levels, practice over the weekends with the more advanced students to keep them interested and to improve their learning curve as well. Your main focus on the weekly in-club practices is to spark interest in competitive math at all levels. Page 12
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Problem Solving Lecture (presentation, lesson) If you or any of your club members are especially knowledgeable about problem solving strategies and/or mathematical topics, this meeting model will be an effective idea. Students will enjoy focusing their time and energy to learning about a specific category of math. This will also improve the confidence of your math club in tackling more difficult problems. Give students a few warm-up problems specifically related to your topic before delving into our lesson. This will help get students thinking and will help you notice which students have prior knowledge about your topic and which ones dont. Focus your lecture around topics that generally arent covered in the school curriculum. There are certain areas of math and certain strategies that will be the same difficulty for students of all math levels to learn. A good topic is one that will be educational and doable for both Geometry students and Calculus students. o Some math topics that work well: number theory, advanced probability, series, combinatorics, bijection, etc. o Some problem solving strategies that work well: how to write proofs and use proof methods, recognizing similarities, noticing patterns, etc. Include a follow-up problem set for students to finish after your lecture. o Problems should range in difficulty and should vary in format and style as much as possible. Although it may be tempting to give every problem set a narrow theme, this is not beneficial to the students ability to recognize the type of a problem, which will aid them greatly in recognizing a solution to the problem. o Each problem should directly relate to your earlier presentation topic o Also, try to include at least two problems per set that seem nearly impossible to do at first. These problems often have a very simple solution if a different approach is used to solve it. Students will need to be familiar with the technique of stepping back a little and trying to solve a problem from a different angle. Eventually, the students will be able to attack problems from the simplest angle on their first try. It is also a good idea to have your own club members present on topics that they know. This will save you work and build a sense of ownership and responsibility amongst your members. Keep in mind that these topics will be advanced for many students, and will be challenging and potentially discouraging. Recognize which students are struggling to give them extra help during the problem set, and to answer any individual questions students may have.
Game Day/Puzzle Day A great way for your math club to relax while still engaging the mind is to host a specific meeting dedicated to playing math related games and solving math related logic puzzles. Allow your members to work collaboratively, and try to bring in several types of puzzles and/or games. Many puzzles can be found online (refer to the WSMA links page) and any hand puzzles or board games will work well. Students also enjoy having a probability themed, card playing game day. Copyright 2009 Washington Student Math Association www.wastudentmath.org
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Be organized
One of the most common ways to discourage members is to give your club members the impression that your math club is not organized. Here are some suggestions for things to keep track of: What problems you have given the math club o Giving the same problems twice usually doesnt help the math club, unless it is one that the students could not resolve. On a similar note, keep track of the types of problems (often probability and counting) that math club as a whole has trouble with, and offer mini-lectures in these areas. Students conflicts o Knowing when students have conflicts with other clubs or extracurricular activities should help gain the students trust in you. A list of students who come each meeting o Record which students stay until the end of each meeting, and keep a mental note of which students tend to arrive late to meetings. Ask students who come late to meetings consistently why they are late. ***
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Competitions
Registration and transportation
Before registering for any given competition, you should check to make sure that math club members are fully committed to that competition. For each competition, you will need to keep in mind when you register: How many teams will you register? Which grade divisions will teams be competing in? Who will pay for the registration?
And you will also need to keep transportation in mind: School permission forms Carpools/Buses Chaperones
Have fun
Being a math club leader can be especially difficult during a hectic competition with excited students. In order to avoid things from becoming disorganized and to save yourself some stress, it may be a good idea to bring puzzles, cards, or games to occupy your students time while you handle things such as registration. Enlist the help of parent volunteers to help you monitor your students needs at the competition, avoid people from getting lost, distribute any informational sheets necessary and to help you arrange lunch and snacks, if needed. This will save you time and stress, and keep things flowing smoothly at the competition.
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A Typical Competition Schedule 9:00 to 9:30 Registration 9:30 to 9:40 Opening directions 9:40 to 12:00 Medley of Individual and Team Rounds (Individual Test, Team tests, etc.) 12:00 to 1:15 Lunch 1:15 to 2:30 Medley of Team Tests (Mental Math, College Bowl, etc.) 2:30 to 3:15 Awards A Quick Competition Outline
Before the competition 1. Choose teams Teams of 4, within grade division (9/10, or 11/12) 2. Divisions (Both grade and math level) 3. Transportation Carpooling, buses, drive individually 4. Studying Study in teams, individually Plan for someone to go to the competition early to order pizza, etc. 5. Materials Pencils, erasers, pens Calculators, rulers, protractors (check the competition if they are allowed) Typical Competition 1. Morning Check in Gather everyone-choose a meeting place Know testing rooms Who is taking what test Student numbers (if applicable) Order pizza 2. Testing Tests last from 20-90 minutes High school tests last longer than elementary school tests Can be multiple choice, or single answer response Individual, Team tests at minimum Normally have at least 1 or 2 other team or individual tests Tests can be split before and after lunch 3. Lunch Lasts more or less 1 hour Pizza is normally given, there are normally restaurants nearby A time to regroup, relax, talk to coaches, give advice 4. Awards Trophies for top students and teams There are some fun awards like raffles Page 16
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Offseason Preparation Consider holding at least one meeting with your officers, and schedule a meeting with your school principal and ASB representative in order to gain the necessary information to pre-plan for the upcoming year. Paperwork and scheduling preparation are best done in the summer to help things flow smoothly during the year. If nothing else, correspond with your officers and your school administrators via email to inform them of any of your plans and/or ideas for the upcoming year.
A few weeks before the season starts, prepare important documents such as your club constitution, syllabus, calendar, and flyers in order to avoid overloading yourself at the beginning of the year. This is also a good method to give your club an organized and structured appearance at your initial meetings to make the best possible impression on prospective members and visitors. Getting your paperwork done early will also allow you to take advantage of recruitment opportunities early in the year, such as parent-teacher curriculum night. Copyright 2009 Washington Student Math Association www.wastudentmath.org Page 17
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Appendix
Online Resources
A multitude of resources are available for you to use and download from www.wastudentmath.org. It is one of our goals to include materials on our website that both new and veteran club leaders will benefit from. As part of our Electronic Data Initiative (EDI), we are compiling everything youll
need to run a math club effectively accessible with only a few clicks of the mouse. Currently,
our website provides math problems, leadership materials and sample documents. If you find that there is a resource or a piece of information you need that our website doesnt provide, please let us know and we will do our best to make sure that resource becomes available for you promptly.
A few of our current online resources: Quick access to math problems to use for team practices and meetings Lists of available competitions and summer programs With each competition and summer program, we will include basic information as well as a link for further information that is not provided on our website. Sample documents used by previous years math clubs with success These include model flyers, letters, and lecture materials
Leadership guidance and ideas Live community forum Our forum is a place where club leaders can ask each other and our student leaders questions regarding general math and Math Club
Lists of helpful math texts, articles, software programs, and other online math links
Additional resources: We host monthly practices for middle and high school students free of charge In our efforts to keep club leaders informed and interested in new opportunities year-round, we provide a state-wide mailing list for club leaders We also provide a calendar of events for math-related events besides competitions
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Sample handouts
Shown in the following pages are a few of the sample handouts you can find online at wastudentmath.org:
Essential Documents Math Club Syllabus .................................................................................................. 20 Informational Outline ............................................................................................. 21 Sample Agenda ....................................................................................................... 22
Sample Warm-Ups Problem Solving Lecture (High School Level) .......................................................... 23 Problem Relay ......................................................................................................... 25
Further Reading
For further reading, refer to the following resources: Art of Problem Solving (AoPS) o www.artofproblemsolving.com is a popular math forum and site designed for both math club students and coaches. This is a culmination of the problem solving book series Art of Problem Solving. Volume I and Volume II are must-reads for all math competitors.
A Mathematicians Lament o www.maa.org/devlin/LockhartsLament.pdf contains an inspiring viewpoint of creativity and mathematics written by Professor Paul Lockhart.
Circle In a Box o http://minerva.msri.org/files/circleinabox.pdf is a thorough and comprehensive guide to starting up and running a math circle effectively, written by Sam Vandervelde. Math circles are very similar to math clubs, except math circles generally are not exclusive to one school, tend to be larger, and encompass math concepts of all different levels. www.wastudentmath.org Page 19
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Your name Home: Insert your phone number Email: Insert your email here
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Basic Information When: Day of Week from Start Time End Time Where: Location, Skyline High School Next Meeting: Next Meeting Date Basic Statistics Over forty members in attendance last year Skyline attended nine competitions, regional, statewide, and nationwide last year Skyline Math Club held an IPod Accessories Fundraiser last year Skyline Math Club members regularly tutoring for community service Skyline Math Club won a total of 21 awards and recognitions last year What to expect this year A multitude of competition and tutoring opportunities A fun environment for problem solving Movies, puzzles/logic games, mock contests, and pizza/snack parties Fundraising Opportunities End of Year Banquet (New) Opportunities to reach out to elementary and middle school students (New) Opportunities to work with the Washington Student Math Association (wastudentmath.org) (New) Access to math modeling software, textbooks, and magazines If you have any further questions, please dont hesitate to contact Our Advisor at [Advisors Email Address] or me at [My Email Address]. Thank you!!
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Agenda for Skyline Math Club (and Robotics Team): 9/14/09 2:30 2:40 2:40 3:20 Intro Activity; Sign in Discuss Math Club and Robotics Team future plans - Math is Cool Competition - Washington Student Math Association - Robotics presentation Mr. Blair Cooper - Robotics team plans Officer Elections *** Intro Activity Small taste of math seen at math competitions
3:20 3:30
Math is Cool Competition - Will be held on Friday, October 23rd at Mount Rainier High School - Registration deadline is September 30th - Team and Individual Events Washington Student Math Association - Expand your knowledge boundaries of math - Meet new people who share a similar interest in math around the state - Casual math practices and events - Service and learning opportunities - Opportunities to lead elementary/middle school math clubs Robotics Presentation - Mr. Blair Cooper was last years Robotics Team supervisor, and part of the Blackberry Project - He will come to speak with us about the details of Robotics Team in-depth Robotics Team Plans - Robotics and math club will meet in separate rooms, but with the same meeting time - Dont worry - it is possible to attend both Robotics and Math competitions and do both Robotics and Math related activities Officer Elections - Please prepare to speak briefly in the event that you are running opposed on Monday - For now, the positions will constitute of: - President, Vice President, Robotics Team Captain, Secretary, Treasurer, Webmaster
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Problem Solving Method 1: Test the first few values of n and look for patterns Example: Find the remainder when 72008 is divided by 19. - Test: What are the remainders of 7n when divided by 19? When n = 1, the value becomes 7 and the remainder is 7 When n = 2, the value becomes 49 and the remainder is 11 When n = 3, the value becomes 343 and the remainder is 1 When n = 4, the value becomes 2401 and the remainder is 7 When n = 5, the value becomes 16807 and the remainder is 11
At this point, we notice a recurring pattern of 7, 11, and 1 as the remainders. This cycle repeats itself for every three values of n. Assuming this pattern holds, we find the remainder when 72008 is divided by 19 by taking the remainder of 2008/3, which is 1. Therefore, 72008 has the same remainder as 71 and the answer is 7, the remainder we found when n = 1.
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Problem Solving Method 2: Use only the necessary information to avoid complex calculations It is difficult to calculate larger powers and take remainders of larger numbers without using a calculator. Fortunately, there is a shorter method.
Why is this? Each time a number is divided, it is split into a quotient (a number divisible by the divisor, ex. 19) and a remainder (a positive integer smaller than 19). The remainder is the only necessary information. The quotient is irrelevant, because it is already divisible by 19 and multiplying it by 7 wont change its divisibility. Thus, all we need to do in order to find the remainder of 7n+1 is to multiply the remainder of 7n by seven, and divide by 19 if necessary.
Our problem now is much simpler, and looks like: - Test: What are the remainders of 7n when divided by 19? When n = 1, the value becomes 7x1=7 and the remainder is 7 When n = 2, the value becomes 7x7=49 and the remainder is 11 When n = 3, the value becomes 7x11=77 and the remainder is 1 When n = 4, the value becomes 7x1=7 and the remainder is 7 When n = 5, the value becomes 7x7=49 and the remainder is 11
Using this method, the reason why the values repeat and follow a cycle of three becomes much clearer.
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Relay Problem # 1
Start
Destination
The 3x3 square grid above represents a birds-eye view of a section of street blocks in New York City. Suppose that I were to start at the upper left hand corner and walk along the street blocks to the lower right hand corner only to the right or downwards. In how many different ways can I reach my destination? *** Relay Problem # 2 Define T to be the answer that was found in Relay Problem # 1. Suppose I draw T/2 number of straight lines in a plane. What is the maximum number of intersection points between these lines?
Intersection Point
*** Relay Problem # 3 Define X to be the answer that was found in Relay Problem # 2. Determine the number of the consecutive end digits of zero of the number X!, where X! denotes X factorial, which is equal to the expression X * (X-1) * (X-2) * 2 * 1.
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Mathematics is like love; a simple idea, but it can get complicated. George Polya
Starting the school year with a new relationship? You might want to get some practice first
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*** Community service opportunities Math tutoring & lectures Competition opportunities & prep Make math fun!
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The Annual