2 minute read
Seeking challenges beyond school math
from The Little Hawk
Students involved in the club have begun to prepare for upcoming math competitions
Sprint Round, which involves 30 multiple-choice questions in 60 minutes. The questions increase in difficulty and calculators are not permitted.
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“We don’t expect anyone to be able to solve all 30 in the Sprint Round,” Al-Herz said. “But what we’re trying to get everybody to solve the first 15 consistently.”
The next rounds include one more individual round and two team-based rounds. Students are allowed to participate in competitions regardless of whether they are members of Math Club.
“Even just going to the competitions will give you the experience of doing the math,” Al-Herz said. “It’s just that you’re not really getting the experience of learning together that you do in Math Club. There’s less of a feeling of community.” do at the start of the
It’s a completely different thought process.”
Math Club supervisor Stephanie McLaughlin emphasized the club’s innovative inquiry into its subject.
“We use curriculum school math in the math that we do in Math Club, but we also pull in lots of other things from number theory and combinatorics,” McLaughlin said. “It’s not as formulaic, although there are formulas that help us do what we do. . . but you never know what to expect, so your geometry comes together with your algebra, and with some statistics and probability, etc. It’s often more problem-based than textbook math, where you’re just asked to ‘solve this equation’ or ‘graph this function.’”
McLaughlin finds it rewarding to watch students learn in Math Club.
“I’ve learned that my students can teach me things,” McLaughlin said. “They have creative ways of doing things, and I can always learn something from my students.
McLaughlin has seen the club undergo various changes since its founding in 1997.
“Sometimes we’ve got big numbers [of students] in the club, and sometimes we have small numbers,” McLaughlin said.
Like many City High activities, Math Club was affected by the pandemic.
“We couldn’t go to contests or do anything face-to-face,” McLaughlin said. “We had to do stuff online, and that brought numbers down a lot, but it is coming back up this year.”
Members of Math Club are now striving to recover from the pandemic and increase their efforts to prepare for monthly competitions in which they compete against other schools’ math teams.
“This year, me and the other members have been putting a lot of effort into planning ahead,” AlHerz said. “Every Thursday in the morning, [someone] will go to the Math Club and present a topic that they learned: some little bit of theory and practice problems, if people wanted to do them. But last year, we’d just pick a problem and agonize over trying to solve it the entire time; and then we wouldn’t even solve it.”
The most common type of competition includes four rounds, beginning with an individual
Al-Herz offered advice for new students looking to join Math Club.
“I want to emphasize that you shouldn’t be scared of looking dumb, or something like that because honestly, every single one of us in Math Club is not even close to as good as so many people that we see in competitions,” Al-Herz said. “We all experience failure there. We’ve all been there, over and over again in Math Club, and it doesn’t really matter. We expect you to get a lot wrong. If you like challenges, then you will probably be a better fit for Math Club because you’re going to lose a lot, you’re going to get a lot of things wrong, and you’re going to be clueless a lot. But I think in the end, it’s fun. It’s a good challenge.”
The City High Math Club meets in Room 1212 on Thursday mornings at 8 a.m.