vEnhance's avatar
Previous Next Page 4 of 16

Jan 05, 2024

🖉 MOHS was a mistake

I remember reading a Paul Graham essay about how people can’t think clearly about parts of their identity. In my students, I have never seen this more clearly than when people argue about the difficulty of problems.

Some years ago I published a chart of my ratings of problem difficulty, using a scale called MOHS. When I wrote this I had two goals in mind. One was that I thought the name “MOHS” for a Math Olympiad Hardness Scale was the best pun of all time, because there’s a geological scale of mineral hardness that coincidentally has the same name. The other was that I thought it would be useful for beginner students, and coaches, to help find problems that are suitable for practice.

I think it did accomplish those goals. The problem is that I also inadvertently helped catalyze an endless, incessant stream of students constantly arguing …

Read more...

Dec 22, 2023

🖉 OTIS Mock AIME 2024

This is a short advertisement announcing that the OTIS Mock AIME 2024 is out. The short version is that I wanted to give my students a chance to try their hand at problem composition, which they took enthusiastically, and from their submissions I chose 15 problems to replicate an AIME.

There’s some really nice problems on here (I have some favorites, but to avoid spoilers for people using this as a practice test, I won’t say which ones yet). You can check it out here:

https://web.evanchen.cc/mockaime.html

I expect a number of students who plan to use this test as practice for the upcoming real AIME, so I’ve set a “deadline” of January 15 and ask to avoid public discussion of spoilers before then.

Nov 06, 2023

🖉 An advertisement for what puzzle hunts are about and why they're cooler than everyday puzzles

I remember when I got the central aha, I justified it to my teammates as “it’d be so cool, so it has to be right”. — Nathan Pinsker

This is a post meant to explain what makes puzzle hunts appealing to people who haven’t done them before.

If you do care about the actual mechanical details, Brian’s introduction is great. The one-sentence summary is: you’re (usually) trying to get an English word/phrase as the final answer, there are (usually) no directions or instructions, and I write “usually” everywhere because puzzle hunts love breaking rules.


When I first tell people about puzzle hunts, their initial reaction is usually that the fun must be in the challenge. And it is not untrue that there is a notion of skill, and it’s satisfying to become a stronger solver. However, I think this misses the point: it ignores the …

Read more...

Nov 03, 2023

🖉 Things I've learned from running OTIS

Note: if you are a prospective OTIS student, read the syllabus instead. More useful, less bragging.

In the unlikely event that I’m a social gathering like a party or family gathering, people will sometimes ask me about my teaching. Invariably they ask, “so do you do like 1:1 meetings or group lessons?”. Then I have to explain, no, I have 400 students, there are no synchronous meetings at all. The core of the program is literally a Python web server that serves PDF files.

Then it sounds less impressive. I guess when people hear I’m a teacher, they expect me to teach classes, and it’s a bit embarrassing to explain that I’m not a teacher in that sense anymore.

But the purpose of OTIS isn’t to make Evan sound cool at parties; the purpose of OTIS to be effective for the students. So this …

Read more...

Oct 23, 2023

🖉 A story of a town

This was originally a diary entry, but I showed it to some students who told me I should put it in my blog instead.

Imagine you’ve moved to a new town, and want to explore the local offerings, because there’s a lot to do and see, and you’re expecting to live here a while.

The first few days, it’s really overwhelming. Everything is unfamiliar. You get lost just trying to buy groceries. You constantly have to consult maps to get anywhere. It takes a while to adjust.

But after the first week, you notice you don’t need a map as much. You can walk to the grocery store yourself; you remember which turn to take each crossing. You know the names of the biggest streets and a few landmarks, and you can get around with familiar roads as anchors. Though you’ve only been inside …

Read more...

Oct 03, 2023

🖉 Yet another reason I don't give much generic advice

So I have an FAQ now for contest-studying advice, but there’s a “frequently used answer” that I want to document now that doesn’t fit in the FAQ format because the question looks different to everyone that asks it.

The questions generally have the same shape: “would it be better to do X or Y when studying?”. Like:

  • Is it better to use GeoGebra when practicing geometry?
  • Should I work on some new OTIS units or go back through some old ones that I didn’t finish?
  • Should I work on hard problems in my strongest subject or medium problems in my weaker subjects?
  • Would it be better if I learned this or that first?

and things like this.

And the answer is, for a lot of pairs (X,Y), if you’re so unsure that you’re asking me about it, then you should just do whatever you …

Read more...

Sep 19, 2023

🖉 The depth of Hanabi

This post is a short chrono-logue about my time with the card game Hanabi, which I play with the H-group. Thus, it’s also implicitly an advertisement for why I enjoy the game Hanabi so much.

I think the progression is a bit interesting because it can be divided into almost discrete “stages”, with each stage feeling really different from the last.

0. Casual in-person play: a memory game

Like many other people in my age group, I first met the card game Hanabi in-person at some summer math camp or other (either MOP or SPARC?). The rules are pretty simple to explain, so it’s popular. But we didn’t have much strategy behind it. We had the idea that we played from left to right, a clue means “play all”, and some form of a Finesse-type blind play.

That meant the game felt kind of like a …

Read more...

Sep 06, 2023

🖉 Slice of life of the OTIS GM

Here’s a snapshot of what running OTIS looks like these days. Starts from last Sunday afternoon until Monday lunch. Timestamps indicate when the action was completed (rather than started).

  • Sunday 13:04: Process a late financial aid request from someone who forgot to request it earlier.
  • Sunday 13:14: Edit OTIS website to clarify that if you haven’t had your registration approved within 48 hours, then you should email Evan to ask.
  • Sunday 13:15: Process a student who wants to drop the fall semester and come back to re-join in the spring.
  • Sunday 13:55: Answer a question from a student on Discord on applying AM-GM on the inequality that I was trying to do in my head when I failed my driving test 11 years ago.
  • Sunday 14:04: Fix a reported typo in the problem statement of China TST 2015/2/3 in the OTIS …
Read more...

Aug 30, 2023

🖉 Things to tell 18-year-old Evan

Early in 2023 the MIT Undergraduate Math Association had an event where course 18’s could get paired with a graduate student and chat over coffee. So naturally I got asked what I wish I knew as an undergraduate. This post records some subset of the things I said.

  1. Undergraduate math isn’t deep after all — it’s broad but shallow. (Graduate school is a different story.) For years, I was told that when I got to university, math would be way harder than in high school, because blah-blah-blah contests aren’t real math blah-blah-blah. Turns out I was somewhat misled.

  2. I wish I had taken fewer math classes. For someone that’s taken circa 30 semesters of math classes, I remember astonishingly little of what was covered. All too often I’ve had the rather depressing experience of not understanding chapters of Napkin, despite being the author.

    Time as …

Read more...

Aug 26, 2023

🖉 Twitch & USEMO Announcement

Twitch Solves ISL Season 3

I’ll be resuming streaming live solves of math problems this fall!

As usual, the stream runs at 5pm Pacific / 8pm Eastern on Fridays, for 2-4 hours per stream usually.

The dates of the first ten streams are currently scheduled (tentatively; these move around a lot) as:

  • ~~Friday September 15~~ Sunday September 17 (note unusual date)
  • Friday September 22
  • Friday September 29
  • Friday October 27
  • Friday November 3
  • Friday November 10
  • Friday November 17
  • Friday November 24
  • Friday December 1
  • Friday December 8

The holiday era (late December / early January) is always a big toss-up, so I’m holding off on scheduling those dates until I have a bit more clarity on my plane tickets those months. We’ll also probably be continuing in the spring semester as well — keep an eye out at https://web.evanchen.cc/videos.html for updates on that.

Tune …

Read more...
Previous Next Page 4 of 16