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Alltop School Mathcounts Competition Results

www.alltopschool.com

In March, Georgia held the MATHCOUNTS math competition. According to incomplete statistics, the following 17 students trained by our school qualified for the state finals, and they were also the top five in each chapter competition:

Zizhan Wang (National Finalist)

Annabel Rong (State Top 6)

Liang Cao (State Top 9)

Christopher Gao

Benjamin You

Aiden Zhao

Sophia Yin

Marty Ho

Darrel Xiao

Shreya Polavarapu

Kaylee Zhao

James Xia

Daksh Khanna

Eafan Chen (New York)

Robert Kong (New York)

Emily Liu

Evan Li

They then entered the next round of high-level state competition held on March 13th. After two rounds of written competitions, Zizhan Wang qualified for the national finals with high score and represented Georgia in the finals. Annabel Rong also entered the top six. They climbed onto the rostrum and had another fierce oral answering contest (Countdown) Zizhan won the first place. In the end, Georgia State won the fourth place in the national competition, which is the best result in the state's history.

 

Congratulations to those winners and their outstanding performance. In fact, these students only come to our school for two hours a week to study. Under this limited short-term training, it is really commendable to achieve such good results. It is worth mentioning that they also participated in the foundation mathematics course training at the same time in our school.

 

This is another achievement of Alltop School's professional training in mathematics competitions for many years. The school is the only after-school training school in Georgia with such a high percentage of students winning the competition every yearIn the past fifteen years, the students who have been trained and competed by Alltop School have won the top ten in the state competition with a high ratio every year. The school becomes well-known in the Greater Atlanta area. 

The following is a brief summary of our school's Mathcounts state competition since 2007 :

2007 : Our students won the first place and entered the national finals

2008 : Our students won the first place and entered the national finals

2009 : 7 students from our school won the top ten, and 2 entered the national finals

2010 : Three students from our school won the top six, and two entered the national finals

2011 : 5 students from our school won the top ten, and 2 entered the national finals

2012 : 5 students from our school won the top ten, and one entered the national finals

2013 : 6 students from our school won the top ten, and 3 students entered the national finals

2014 : 8 students from our school won the top ten, and 3 of them entered the top three and entered the national finals

2015 : 8 students from our school won the top ten, and the top four students all came from our school and entered the national finals

2016 : 6 students from our school won the top ten, and two students won the championship and third place respectively, and entered the national finals

2017 : 5 students from our school won the top ten, and 2 students entered the national finals

2018 : 4 students from our school won the top ten, and one student entered the national finals

2019 : 5 students from our school won the top ten, and two students won the championship and second place respectively, and entered the national finals

2020 : No due to the epidemic

2021 : Three students from our school won the top ten, two students won the championship and runner-up, and entered the national finals

2022 : 5 students from our school won the top ten, one won the championship, and entered the national finals

 

Mathcounts is the largest middle school math competition in the country. There are many participating schools. The scope of competition content and difficulty skills are wide and deep. There are about 250,000 students in Georgia 's public schools, and about 25,000 students in private schools. Among the nearly 300,000 student teams, after different levels of competition and screening, only a small number of students entered the state finals.

The students trained by Alltop School have won the first place in the Mathcounts competition for many years, which highlights the unique brand of the school and represents the special strength of the school

Behind the successin addition to their intelligence, these contestants also got a lot of effective trainingThey deeply realized that Alltop School not only gave them a second classbut also hand them the key to open the door of winning. The correct method guidancetactical instructionskill training, and teaching methods of various topics and breakthroughs enable students to turn difficult things easyAlltop School believes in one thing: the easiest thing is to make the easy difficult, and the hardest thing is to make the difficult easy. When students feel that the teacher's explanation is too difficultthey can only tell that the teacher's teaching has not been successful. Alltop School's motto is to make things easier. For the students who take intensive training, when they face different exams or difficult problems, they will say: It's not difficult , I have learned it at Alltop School!

 

 Competition training is only part of the program of Alltop School, the school has multi-level and multi-faceted training. The school provides intensive improvement training for foundation math courses, with different levels. The progress of students is the beginning of the success of the school, and the success of students also describes the coordinates of the development of the school.

 

Since the epidemic, the teaching for our school has been moved online. Due to the teaching software developed by ourselves, it has provided students with a more effective learning environment and tools, and at the same time it saved a lot of time for students and parents. Students can also watch class videos and re-watch later to maximize the learning effect.

 

For some questions that you are often concerned about, please click the link below to view our answers and suggestions for you:

http://www.alltopschool.com/news/MathcountsFAQ.html