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How wide is the learning gap between completing first and second/second and third/etc problems?

Yannno
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    http://chat.stackexchange.com/ Open Mathematics chat room. Ping user Kaj Hansen and GBeau, they took the exam recently and could help. – Swapnil Tripathi Dec 13 '14 at 04:46
  • @SwapnilTripathi Not enough rep :/ – Yannno Dec 13 '14 at 04:48
  • You can't participate in the contest without some faculty advisor in your school arranging contest registration and so on. Talk to whoever takes care of that at your school. Here is a brief syllabus, but the difficulty of the problems is not measured by the material they are based on. –  Dec 13 '14 at 05:00
  • I have added the "soft-question" tag. If you don't think that it is appropriate, please tell me. –  Dec 13 '14 at 05:08

1 Answers1

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  1. The Putnam competition is offered every year on the first Saturday in December. It is limited to undergraduates, but not limited to math majors - any undergraduate in the US is eligible to take it. However, if you intend on taking the exam you need to let your math department know, preferably sometime in October or so; the Putnam committee only sends as many exams as necessary to each school.

  2. In theory, every problem can be answered by someone who has had some education in Euclidean geometry, linear algebra, definitions in abstract algebra, and calculus (up to multivariable). In practice, some exposure to number theory, basic real analysis, and combinatorics will probably help. You should never need things like complex analysis, topology, advanced group theory, or other advanced topics to solve a problem on the Putnam. Knowledge of more advanced topics is never necessary, and often not particularly helpful either (though many problems have multiple solutions, and sometimes some of these solutions can pull in more advanced material).

  3. The Putnam is all about knowing the tricks to solve a problem. There is a sort of standard toolbox for Putnam problems, and for the most part you shouldn't have to deviate outside of this toolbox. Things like the basic inequalities (AM-GM-HM, Cauchy-Schwarz, Holder, etc.), generating functions, pigeonhole principle. Some institutions offer a Putnam seminar or problem-solving session where such a toolbox is developed.

  4. The first problems on each set are usually the easiest. The fifth and sixth problems are usually quite difficult for all takers. There are years where no one in the top 200 takers score on one of these problems. For scoring, it's better to provide a very complete solution to one problem than provide incomplete solutions to two or three problems. The scoring committee is very stingy with partial credit; answers usually score 0,1,2, 9, or 10, and rarely in between. There is, strictly speaking, not really much of a learning gap between the problems, only a major difficulty gap after problem 4.

  5. To do well on the Putnam, you need practice with competition math problems. These sorts of problems are typically eventually solvable using something in a standard toolbox, but you need to put the problem in a form where you can recognize what tools you need. This sort of intuition and creativity can only be gained with practice, since by design the problems will try to avoid being intuitively approachable.

  6. If you decide to take the Putnam, remember not to take it overly seriously. While doing well can be a plus to your CV should you decide to apply to graduate school or some mathematics REUs, it is at best a rather minor plus. There is no such thing as doing poorly on a test whose median score is a zero. It's supposed to be for fun, so you should have fun!

Gyu Eun Lee
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  • Since Putnam registration form is due at Santa Clara in mid-October, they better let the department know in September. –  Dec 13 '14 at 05:05
  • At Rutgers I've typically gotten away with mid-October and sometimes later. But yes, the earlier the better of course. – Gyu Eun Lee Dec 13 '14 at 05:08
  • @neuguy Thank you so much!!! Very helpful and encompassing. Also I've only intended to do it for enjoyment and maybe a side goal, but thanks for the heads up. :) – Yannno Dec 13 '14 at 05:12
  • 'You should never need to know things like complex analysis' - I remember any number of (basic) complex analysis questions on the Putnams, mostly to do with roots of equations in the complex plane; is my recollection flawed? – Steven Stadnicki Dec 13 '14 at 05:23
  • You definitely need to be comfortable with complex functions, especially complex polynomials, but I don't think you should ever need complex analysis itself. Maybe the residue theorem at most. Even then I don't think it would be required, just one possible way to handle a problem. – Gyu Eun Lee Dec 13 '14 at 05:28