Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you’re looking for a tutor, I’ve heard about https://olympiadinsider.com/tutoring
Let me know how it goes if you give them a try; we are looking for an amc 8 tutor as well
Apparently these amc exams are more about strategy than actual math these days… so much for a math competition
Not true, unless you are counting "get a copy of the test in advance" as a strategy, which was popular this year.
They are about knowing all of a very specific set of material, and drilling to increase speed, though, if you want to be one of the highest free scores.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are a dozen websites that provide that basic information for free, and free forums where people give advice.
If someone "often waste 15 minute on one problem" and can't figure out what do about that, the chance is very little that they'll be able to solve hard new problems on the test.
I think OP (or the person you replied to) was mainly looking for someone with credentials and experience. Similar how 10000 SAT “advice” articles exist yet people still pay $100-200+/hour for tutoring with a reputable tutor
Yes, that's what I said.
that is what you said, but OP probably would trust credentialed tutors more than randoms on the internet (those "dozen websites" and "free forums" are unreliable; most "resources" are posted by amazon affiliates trying to make a commission)
paranoia on stillts
DP here and find advice here to be incredibly useful.
Usually, but why risk your child’s math education to strangers in the internet rather than experts? [/quote
Honestly your money is better in the pockets of those kids who worked hard to learn math, so give it to them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are a dozen websites that provide that basic information for free, and free forums where people give advice.
If someone "often waste 15 minute on one problem" and can't figure out what do about that, the chance is very little that they'll be able to solve hard new problems on the test.
I think OP (or the person you replied to) was mainly looking for someone with credentials and experience. Similar how 10000 SAT “advice” articles exist yet people still pay $100-200+/hour for tutoring with a reputable tutor
Yes, that's what I said.
that is what you said, but OP probably would trust credentialed tutors more than randoms on the internet (those "dozen websites" and "free forums" are unreliable; most "resources" are posted by amazon affiliates trying to make a commission)
paranoia on stillts
DP here and find advice here to be incredibly useful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry to step in, but what is a good book for AMC10 prep? I just ordered AoPS Volume 1 book. Is this the right one?
We did all AoPS intro books, and almost done with AoPS intermediate algebra book except for the last five chapters.
You need Intro Counting and Number theory, which is in AoPS vol 1 or the AoPS dedicated textbooks, or free videos and alcumus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are a dozen websites that provide that basic information for free, and free forums where people give advice.
If someone "often waste 15 minute on one problem" and can't figure out what do about that, the chance is very little that they'll be able to solve hard new problems on the test.
I think OP (or the person you replied to) was mainly looking for someone with credentials and experience. Similar how 10000 SAT “advice” articles exist yet people still pay $100-200+/hour for tutoring with a reputable tutor
Yes, that's what I said.
that is what you said, but OP probably would trust credentialed tutors more than randoms on the internet (those "dozen websites" and "free forums" are unreliable; most "resources" are posted by amazon affiliates trying to make a commission)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are a dozen websites that provide that basic information for free, and free forums where people give advice.
If someone "often waste 15 minute on one problem" and can't figure out what do about that, the chance is very little that they'll be able to solve hard new problems on the test.
I think OP (or the person you replied to) was mainly looking for someone with credentials and experience. Similar how 10000 SAT “advice” articles exist yet people still pay $100-200+/hour for tutoring with a reputable tutor
Yes, that's what I said.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are a dozen websites that provide that basic information for free, and free forums where people give advice.
If someone "often waste 15 minute on one problem" and can't figure out what do about that, the chance is very little that they'll be able to solve hard new problems on the test.
I think OP (or the person you replied to) was mainly looking for someone with credentials and experience. Similar how 10000 SAT “advice” articles exist yet people still pay $100-200+/hour for tutoring with a reputable tutor
Anonymous wrote:Sorry to step in, but what is a good book for AMC10 prep? I just ordered AoPS Volume 1 book. Is this the right one?
We did all AoPS intro books, and almost done with AoPS intermediate algebra book except for the last five chapters.
Anonymous wrote:There are a dozen websites that provide that basic information for free, and free forums where people give advice.
If someone "often waste 15 minute on one problem" and can't figure out what do about that, the chance is very little that they'll be able to solve hard new problems on the test.
Of course there is an order - you can't take calculus before precalculus, or volume 1 before algebra.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not true if the student has completed the introductory AoPS books. They can start with volume 2.Anonymous wrote:AoPS's "Middle school competition math" (i.e. AoPS Vol1) is a misnomer. It should be called "intermediate competition math". You need to master it before you start "HS competition math" (AoPS Vol1).
Many high school mathletes (i.e. those wanting to get to the AIME) would benefit by mastering Vol1.
Not sure what semantics you're parsing here. Obviously no one has to take any AOPS classes in any order. The point was that AoPS vol.1 is valuable to even high schoolers, which was the concern of OP for her rising 9th grader.
Anonymous wrote:Not true if the student has completed the introductory AoPS books. They can start with volume 2.Anonymous wrote:AoPS's "Middle school competition math" (i.e. AoPS Vol1) is a misnomer. It should be called "intermediate competition math". You need to master it before you start "HS competition math" (AoPS Vol1).
Many high school mathletes (i.e. those wanting to get to the AIME) would benefit by mastering Vol1.