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Australian amc Award
Australian AMC is the abbreviation of Australian Mathematics Competition. Sponsored by the Australian Mathematical Trust Fund (AMT) founded by the famous mathematician Peter O'Halloran on 1978. This is the largest school-based mathematics competition in the world. Today, students from more than 30 countries participate every year. It is also an important competition index for Australia to select the international mathematical Olympic national team.

The Australian Mathematics Competition (AM) was held in Australia on 1978, which was the first mathematics challenge for Australian students. It has become the largest single activity in Australian education history, allowing students to participate in activities in more than 30 countries around the world on the same day.

Australian AMC competition is divided into five levels: A (grade 3-4), B (grade 5-6), C (grade 7-8), D (grade 9-10) and E (grade1-12). Students There are ***30 questions in the Australian AMC paper, of which the first 20 questions are basic difficulty, with a total score of * * * 70; The title of the last five courses is difficulty, with a total score of ***25, and the total score of the last five difficulty fill-in-the-blank questions is ***40 Australian AMC awards and scores.

Full score: 135 grand prize: top 0.3% (lower grade 130, upper grade 1 15 or above). The highest score of the first prize: the top 3%(A-D) and the top 5%(E). Second prize distinction: the top 20%(A-D) and the top 25%(E-level). Third prize credits: top 55%(A-D) and top 60%(E-level).