From Italy's elegant Florence Cathedral to Spain's magnificent
Aqueduct of Segovia, architectural masterpieces of an ancient time
permeate the Mediterranean region. These sometimes gargantuan
structures remain to this day an incredible feat of accomplishment
and stand as a testament to the human race and its capabilities in
both artistic skill and mathematical intellect.
Perpetuating the mathematical ingenuity of talented individuals,
the Mathematical Sciences Laboratory (LabSciMat) of the Rome
University for International Studies hosted this year's first
Mediterranean Youth Mathematical Championship (MYMC).
"The aim of the competition was to encourage Mediterranean youth,
both male and female, to develop an interest in mathematics - a
discipline which has been of great importance for the growth of the
cultural community of the Mediterranean Sea," says Director of
LabSciMat Giandomenico Boffi.
ICTP, together with the Italian National Institute for Advanced
Mathematics and the Italian Ministry of Education, funded and
promoted the competition. Of the twenty Mediterranean countries
invited, seven participated: Cyprus, Italy, Lebanon, Morocco,
Palestine, Slovenia and Spain.
Funding went to four high school students, two boys and two girls,
from each country to cover travel and housing expenses to Rome so
they could compete against the other countries. The students
arrived on July 17 and the competition took place the following
day. The competition involved intense morning and afternoon stages
where students from the same country collaborated to complete a
series of complex mathematical problems without the use of
calculators or other technology.
"Since high school curricula differ from country to country, the
problems tend to challenge intelligence more than competence,"
Boffi says. "For the MYMC it was particularly important to be able
to work as a team. Moreover, since English was the working language
of the MYMC, this constituted an extra challenge for the
participants, because none of them came from an English speaking
country."
At the end of the day, the jury added up each country's score. With a total of 26
possible points, Italy took first place with 19.5 points followed
closely by Spain with 18.5 points. Afterward, as a reward for their
hard work, all students were granted an evening tour of Rome.
During the rewards ceremony the following day, each student
received diplomas from several distinguished Italian
mathematicians: Ciro Ciliberto, the president of the Italian
mathematical society; Elisabetta Strickland, the vice-president of
the Italian national institute for advanced Mathematics; Lucia
Caporaso, the chair of the Mathematics and Physics department at
"Roma Tre" University; Domenico Marinucci, the chair of the Math
department at Tor Vergata University of Rome.
"The idea was to have a MathFest more than a competition," Boffi
says. "Although the students already like Mathematics before
coming, being involved in this event sharpens their interest for
the subject and suggests the possibility of attending a university
programme in mathematics offered by institutions located in other
Mediterranean countries."
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Promoting Math through the Ages
ICTP supports first Mediterranean Youth Mathematical Championship
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