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Elite Math Competitions Struggle to Diversify Their Talent Pool

【A】 Interest in elite high school math competitions has grown in recent years, and in light of last summer’s U.S. win at the International Math Olympiad—the first for an American team in more than two decades—the trend is likely to continue.
【B】 But will such contests, which are overwhelmingly dominated by Asian and white students from middle-class and affluent families, become any more diverse? Many social and cultural factors play roles in determining which promising students get on the path toward international math recognition. But efforts are in place to expose more black, Hispanic, and low-income students to advanced math, in the hope that the demographic pool of high-level contenders will eventually begin to shift and become less insular.
【C】 “The challenge is if certain types of people are doing something, it’s difficult for other people to break into it,” said Po-Shen Loh, the head coach of last year’s winning U.S. Math Olympiad team and an associate professor of mathematics at Carnegie Mellon University. Participation grows through friends and networks and if “you realize that’s how they’re growing, you can start to take action” and bring in other students, he said.
【D】Most of the training for advanced-math competitions happens outside the confines of the normal school day. Students attend after-school clubs, summer camps, online forums and classes, and university-based “math circles”, or mathematician-led groups, to prepare for the paper-based and face-to-face competitions.
【E】One of the largest feeders for high school math competitions—including those that eventually lead to the International Math Olympiad—is a middle school program called MATHCOUNTS. About 100,000 students around the country participate in the program’s competition series, which culminates in a national game-show-style contest held each May. The most recent one took place last week in Washington. Students join a team through their schools, which provide a volunteer coach and pay a nominal fee to send students to regional and state competitions. The 224 students who make it to the national competition get an all-expenses-paid trip.
【F】Nearly all members of last year’s winning U.S. IMO team took part in MATHCOUNTS as middle school students—as did Loh, the coach. “Middle school is an important age because students have enough math capability to solve advanced problems, but they haven’t really decided what they want to do with their lives,” said Loh. “They often get hooked then.”
【G】Another influential feeder for advanced-math students is an online school called Art of Problem Solving, which began about 13 years ago and now has 15,000 users. Students use forums to chat, play games, and solve problems together at no cost, or they can pay a few hundred dollars to take courses with trained teachers. According to Richard Rusczyk, the company founder, the six U.S. team members who competed at the International Math Olympiad last year collectively took more than 40 courses on the site. Parents of advanced-math students and MATHCOUNTS coaches say the children are on the website constantly.
【H】 There are also dozens of summer camps—many attached to universities—that aim to prepare elite math students. Some are pricey—a three-week, intensive program can cost $4,500 or more—but most offer scholarships. The Math Olympiad Summer Training Program—the three-week math camp held by the Mathematical Association of America that leads straight to the international championship—is free for those who make it. Only about 50 students are invited based on their performance on written tests and at the USA Math Olympiad.
【I】Students in university towns may also have access to another lever for involvement in accelerated math: math circles. In these groups, which came out of an Eastern European tradition of developing young talent, professors teach promising K-12 students advanced mathematics for several hours after school or on weekends. The Los Angeles Math Circle, held at the University of California, Los Angeles, began in 2007 with 20 students and now has more than 250.
【J】According to Mark Saul, the director of competitions for the Mathematical Association of America, not a single African-American or Hispanic student—and only a handful of girls—has ever made it to the Math Olympiad team in its 50 years of existence. Many schools simply don’t prioritize academic competitions. “Do you know who we have to beat?” asked Saul. “The football team, the basketball team—that’s our competition for resources, student time, attention, school dollars, parent efforts, school enthusiasm.”
【K】According to Lou DiGioia, the program’s executive director, those connections often last well into high school, and beyond. “Kids at the MATHCOUNTS national competition are in the top echelon of math intelligence—they’re just in their own world. It’s great for them to come together and have a network of people.” There is a downside to the social aspect of advanced-math competitions: It can breed insular communities.
【L】A New York City-based nonprofit called Bridge to Enter Mathematics runs a residential summer program aimed at getting underserved, mostly black and Hispanic students working toward math and science careers. The summer after 7th grade, students spend three weeks on a college campus studying advanced math for seven hours a day. Over the next five years, the group helps the students get into other elite summer math programs, high-performing high schools, and eventually college. About 250 students so far have gone through the program, which receives funding from the Jack Kent Cooke Foundation. (The foundation also supports some coverage of low-income, high-achieving students in Education Week.)
【M】 “If you look at a lot of low-income communities in the United States, there are programs that are serving them, but they’re primarily centered around, ‘Let’s get these kids’ grades up,’ and not around, ‘Let’s get these kids access to the same kinds of opportunities as more-affluent kids,’ ” said Daniel Zaharopol, the founder and executive director of the program. “We’re trying to create that pathway.” Students apply to the program directly through their schools. “We want to reach parents who are not plugged into the system,” said Zaharopol.

Winners of local contests will participate in the national math competition for free.

A
A
B
B
C
C
D
D
E
E
F
F
G
G
H
H
I
I
J
J
K
K
L
L
M
M
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答案:

E

解析:

36. Middle school is a crucial period when students may become keenly interested in advanced mathematics.[F] “Middle school is an important age because students have enough math capability to solve advanced problems, but they haven’t really decided what they want to do with their lives,” said Loh. “They often get hooked then.”

解析:首先在题目中锁定定位词middle school和crucial period,然后带着定位词回原文找,从而定位到F段引语处。题目是对F段引语的概括总结。crucial period是定位句中important age的同义替换。

37. Elite high school math competitions are attracting more interest throughout the United States.

[A] Interest in elite high school math competitions has grown in recent years, and in light of last summer’s U.S. win at the International Math Olympiad—the first for an American team in more than two decades—the trend is likely to continue.

解析:首先在题目中锁定定位词math competitions和more interest,然后带着定位词回原文找,从而定位到A段开头。题目是对A段开头内容的同义转述。more interest是定位句中grown的同义替换。

38. Math circles provide students with access to advanced-math training by university professors.

[I] Students in university towns may also have access to another lever for involvement in accelerated math: math circles. In these groups, which came out of an Eastern European tradition of developing young talent, professors teach promising K-12 students advanced mathematics for several hours after school or on weekends.

解析:首先在题目中锁定定位词math circles和university professors,然后带着定位词回原文找,从而定位到I段前两句话。题目是对I段这两句话的概括总结。

39. Students may take advantage of online resources to learn to solve math problems.

[G] Another influential feeder for advanced-math students is an online school called Art of Problem Solving, which began about 13 years ago and now has 15,000 users. Students use forums to chat, play games, and solve problems together at no cost, or they can pay a few hundred dollars to take courses with trained teachers.

解析:首先在题目中锁定定位词take advantage of和online resources,然后带着定位词回原文找,从而定位到G段前两句话。题目是对G段这两句话的概括总结。其中的take advantage of对应定位句的use forums to chat, play games, and solve problems together。

40. The summer program run by a nonprofit organization has helped many underserved students learn advanced math.

[L] A New York City-based nonprofit called Bridge to Enter Mathematics runs a residential summer program aimed at getting underserved, mostly black and Hispanic students working toward math and science careers.

解析:首先在题目中锁定定位词summer program和nonprofit organization,然后带着定位词回原文找,从而定位到L段开头。题目是对L段开头的同义转述。

41. Winners of local contests will participate in the national math competition for free.

[E] The most recent one took place last week in Washington. Students join a team through their schools, which provide a volunteer coach and pay a nominal fee to send students to regional and state competitions. The 224 students who make it to the national competition get an all-expenses-paid trip.

解析:首先在题目中锁定定位词winners和national math competition以及free,然后带着定位从回原文找,从而定位到E段结尾。题目是对E段结尾的同义转述。for free是定位句中all-expenses-paid的同义替换。

42. Many schools don’t place academic competitions at the top of their priority list.

[J] Many schools simply don’t prioritize academic competitions.

解析:首先在题目中锁定定位词academic competitions和the top of their priority list,然后带着定位词回原文找,从而定位到J段第2句话。题目是对J段这句话的同义转述。the top of their priority list是定位句中prioritize的同义替换。

43. Contestants of elite high school math competitions are mostly Asian and white students from well-off families.

[B] But will such contests, which are overwhelmingly dominated by Asian and white students from middle-class and affluent families, become any more diverse?

解析:首先在题目中锁定定位词Asian和well-off families,然后带着定位词回原文找,从而定位到B段开头。题目是对B段开头的同义转述。well-off families是定位句中affluent families的同义替换。

44. Some math training programs primarily focus on raising students’ math score.

[M] “If you look at a lot of low-income communities in the United States, there are programs that are serving them, but they’re primarily centered around, ‘Let’s get these kids’ grades up,’ and not around, ‘Let’s get these kids access to the same kinds of opportunities as more-affluent kids,’ ” said Daniel Zaharopol, the founder and executive director of the program.

解析:首先在题目中锁定定位词primarily和math score,然后带着定位词回原文找,从而定位到M段开头。题目是对M段开头的同义转述。score是定位句中grades的同义替换。

45. Some intensive summer programs are very expensive but most of them provide scholarships.

[H] Some are pricey—a three-week, intensive program can cost $4,500 or more—but most offer scholarships.

解析:首先在题目中锁定定位词intensive summer programs和scholarships,然后带着定位词回原文找,从而定位到H段第2句。题目是对H段该句的同义转述。expensive是定位句中pricey的同义替换。

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