American Regions Mathematics League


The American Regions Mathematics League, is an annual, national high school mathematics team competition held simultaneously at four locations in the United States: the University of Iowa, Penn State, UNLV, and the newly added site at the University of Alabama in Huntsville. Past sites have included San Jose State University, Rutgers University, and Duke University.
ARML is a prestigious, national math tournament that is often called the "World Series of Mathematics Competitions". Teams consist of 15 members, which usually represent a large geographic region or a large population center. Some math and science magnet schools, such as Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology, VA, and the Academy for the Advancement of Science and Technology, NJ, also field teams. The competition is held on the first Saturday after Memorial Day.
As of 2014, over 150 teams competed with around 2000 students.
ARML problems cover a wide variety of mathematical topics including algebra, geometry, number theory, combinatorics, probability, and inequalities. Calculus is not required to successfully complete any problem, but may facilitate solving the problem more quickly or efficiently. While part of the competition is short-answer based, there is a cooperative team round, and a proof-based power question. ARML problems are harder than most high school mathematics competitions.
The contest is largely made possible by the monetary contribution of D. E. Shaw & Co. among other smaller contributors.

Competition format

The competition consists of four formal events:
At the end, there is a set of tiebreaker questions to determine the top 20 participants, who receive cash prizes from D. E. Shaw & Co.. Each student tied for the highest score is given up to three tiebreaker questions, one at a time, with the goal of answering correctly as quickly as possible. As soon as a student answers a tiebreaker question correctly, they have finished the tiebreaker. Students are then ranked by individual round score, followed by the time to answer the first tiebreaker question correctly, then the time to answer the second tiebreaker, then the third. Students are given 10 minutes to answer the first tiebreaker question, and 6 minutes to answer each of the second and third tiebreaker questions.
In recent years, there has been a super relay, where two groups of seven team members both work to give a correct answer to the fifteenth team member. That last team member substitutes two answers into his problem. For logistical reasons, the Super Relay has never counted towards the team score. It was instituted as a "filler" while scores are tabulated. Candies and other goodies are sometimes rewards for the super relay round.
Also in recent years, a song contest has become an informal event at ARML. Each school is allowed to have any number of their students perform a song related to mathematics, usually a parody of a popular song, with its lyrics replaced.
The format of the ARML competition is based on the NYSML competition, but is generally considered more difficult than the NYSML competition. This format also inspired the Great Plains Math League.

History

The New York State Mathematics League held its first competition in 1973, a competition intended for New York state teams. A team from Massachusetts asked to participate in the 1974 NYSML competition, and it took first place. This led to the creation of the Atlantic Regions Mathematics League in 1976, which became the American Regions Mathematics League in 1984.
When the Atlantic Regions Mathematics League was founded, the competition was held at a single eastern site that changed from year to year:
YearLocation
1976C. W. Post College
1977Brown University
1978Rutgers University
1979Brown University
1980Rutgers University
1981University of Maryland College Park
1982University of Maryland College Park
1983Pennsylvania State University

After 1983, the coordinators decided to keep the competition at Penn State University. ARML expanded to two sites in the late 1980s and to three sites in 1995. In 2008, ARML added a fourth site at the University of Georgia in Athens to better accommodate students in the Southeast, which moved to the University of Alabama in Huntsville in 2020.
The 2006 competition saw significant expansion. Around 120 teams and a total of around 1800 students competed, which was around 25% larger than during any other year. The attendance at the western site, UNLV, nearly doubled.

Past Team Winners

YearTeamScore
1976New York City A117
1977Massachusetts A148
1978Fairfax-Montgomery135
1979New York City A129
1980New York City A113
1981New York City A166
1982New York City A132
1983New York City A132
1984New York City A162
1985Montgomery County, Maryland A157
1986New York City A183
1987New York City A170
1988Chicago A197
1989Chicago A187
1990Ontario A197
1991Ontario A200
1992Georgia A172
1993Thomas Jefferson A190
1994New York City A183
1995New York City A126
1996San Francisco Bay Area A179
1997Minnesota Gold125
1998Massachusetts A171
1999San Francisco Bay Area A187
2000Chicago A/San Francisco Bay Area A 172
2001San Francisco Bay Area A191
2002Thomas Jefferson A190
2003Thomas Jefferson A155
2004Thomas Jefferson A166
2005Lehigh Valley Fire172
2006North Carolina A186
2007Phillips Exeter Red171
2008New York City A170
2009Lehigh Valley Fire215
2010Lehigh Valley Fire204
2011Lehigh Valley Fire232
2012North Carolina A223
2013San Francisco Bay Area A234
2014PEARL A260
2015San Francisco Bay Area A211
2016San Francisco Bay Area A210
2017San Francisco Bay Area A245
2018Thomas Jefferson High School for the Science and Technology A1234
2019Thomas Jefferson High School for the Science and Technology A1245

Past Individual Winners

YearTeam
1977Randal Dougherty
1978Fred Helenius
1979Irwin Jungreis
1980Paul Feldman
1981Benji Fisher
1982Noam Elkies
1983David Zuckerman
1984Mike Reid
1985Ken Fan
1986John Overdeck
1987Danny Cory
1988Michael Zieve
1989Sam Vandervelde
1990Akira Negi
1991Andrew Schultz
1992Robert Kleinberg
1993Jeremy Bem
1994Noam Shazeer
1995Daniel Stronger
1996Nathan Curtis
1997Davesh Maulik
1998Gabriel Carroll
1999Gabriel Carroll
2000Tiankai Liu
2001Gabriel Carroll
2002Ruozhou Jia
2003Anders Kaseorg
2004Aaron Pixton
2005Ryan Ko
2006Samuel Dittmer
2007Tao Ran Chen
2008Qin Xuan Pan
2009Zhuo Qun Song
2010Ben Gunby
2011Zhuo Qun Song
2012Allen Liu
2013Allen Liu
2014Darryl Wu
2015Brice Huang
2016Daniel Kim
2017Brian Reinhart
2018Luke Robitaille
2019David Chen