In 2022, Cheenta is hosting the final round of Sharygin Geometrical Olympiad in Kolkata center for Indian participants. This is in collaboration with the Organizing committee from MOSCOW CENTER FOR LIFELONG MATHEMATICAL EDUCATION.
This is an international competition on geometry. High-school students of four elder grades (8-11 grades in Russia) are eligible to participate. There are two rounds: qualification round per correspondance and a final round.
Here is the detail for 2022 final round participants in India.
Date and Time: 31st July and 1st August, 12:30 PM IST
Location: 3rd Floor, 22 Lake Place, Kolkata 700029 (near Kalighat metro session)
Direction: Take the lane beside Charuchandra College near Lake Mall
The contest is held as an oral exam. That is, the participants make their drafts and figures but don't deliver a complete paper, and they deliver their solutions in oral form to the Jury using their drafts and figures.
The only possible marks are 1 (solved) or 0 (unsolved).
Each participant has three attempts to deliver the solution of a given problem (of course if he has got 1 then he stops to deliver this problem).
In 2022, Cheenta is hosting the final round of Sharygin Geometrical Olympiad in Kolkata center for Indian participants. This is in collaboration with the Organizing committee from MOSCOW CENTER FOR LIFELONG MATHEMATICAL EDUCATION.
This is an international competition on geometry. High-school students of four elder grades (8-11 grades in Russia) are eligible to participate. There are two rounds: qualification round per correspondance and a final round.
Here is the detail for 2022 final round participants in India.
Date and Time: 31st July and 1st August, 12:30 PM IST
Location: 3rd Floor, 22 Lake Place, Kolkata 700029 (near Kalighat metro session)
Direction: Take the lane beside Charuchandra College near Lake Mall
The contest is held as an oral exam. That is, the participants make their drafts and figures but don't deliver a complete paper, and they deliver their solutions in oral form to the Jury using their drafts and figures.
The only possible marks are 1 (solved) or 0 (unsolved).
Each participant has three attempts to deliver the solution of a given problem (of course if he has got 1 then he stops to deliver this problem).