the putnam exam during year zero usma-harvard math competition of 1933 presented by: cpt michelle...
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The Putnam Exam During Year Zero
USMA-Harvard Math Competition of 1933
Presented By:
CPT Michelle Isenhour
Western Michigan University
Putnam Mathematical Competition
Conducted by the MAA
Began in 1938 and has prospered since
Named after the late William Lowell Putnam
12 questions in two three-hour sessions
Individual and team awards
The Legacy of Putnam
1921 – Putnam suggested the development of academic competition
1928 – English competition between Harvard and Yale (Harvard won)
Yale and Princeton declined further competitions in English
Cambridge declined competition in Economics
The Trouncing…
November 1932 – Army trounced Harvard in football 46-0
President Lowell proclaimed that Harvard “could just as easily win any contest of a more academic nature”
The Challenge…
“…I would very much like to test our method of teaching mathematics against that of your institution. I, frankly, think our method is superior to yours, and would like to try it out.”
-Major General Connor, Superintendent of
the United States Military Academy in a 1932 letter to President Lowell
Preparations for the Competition
Rules delegated to department heads– Lieutenant Colonel Harris Jones, USMA– Professor William C. Graustein, Harvard
Exchanged information about curricula, pedagogy, and students
West Point Curricula
Four semester core curriculum– Freshmen: 8 hours per week– Sophomores:4 hours per week
Subjects– Algebra and Trigonometry– Solid and Analytic Geometry– Differential and Integral Calculus– Least Squares (upper 1/3 of class)
Harvard Curricula
Freshmen– Met for 3 hours per week– Textbooks
Osgood and Graustein, Plane and Analytic Geometry Osgood’s Introduction to Calculus
Sophomores– Under guidance of tutors– Subjects
Analytic Geometry Algebra
Oscillation Begins…
Resolved Issues– Topics examined: analytic geometry and calculus– Sophomores examined in May 1933
Unresolved Issues– West Point wanted 20-25 contestants, Harvard 10– Home Team and Host– Length of Test
Continues…
LTC Jones, USMA– Offered to lower the number of contestants to 15
and have his team travel to Harvard for the test on 20 May
– Suggested one three-hour test claiming six-hours would “convert and interesting contest into dull drudgery and kill the enthusiasm of the competition”
Continues…
Professor Graustein, Harvard– Established the number per side as 10– No expectation that the Military Academy
would bear any part of the expense– Two three-hour sessions with the second more
challenging– Twice as much calculus as analytic geometry
and include theoretical questions on test– Allow formula cards, logarithm tables, and
Pierce’s Integral Tables as references– Harvard would be happy to travel to West Point
…and Ends
LTC Jones, USMA– Agreed to two-part test and use of Pierce’s
Integral Tables– Scoring would be that used in cross-country
meets
Completing the Committee
President of the MAA – the body which stands for collegiate mathematics in this country
Professor Arnold Dresden seemed almost ‘ordained’ for the job and accepted the invitation
Scope of the Examination (1 of 2)
Plane Analytic Geometry– Distance from a point to a
line– Conics – Derivation of
equations in rectangular and polar coordinates
– General equation of the second degree; simplification by translations and rotation of coordinate axes
– Locus problems involving applications of the above
Solid Analytic Geometry– Equations of straight lines
and planes– Distance from point to a
plane or line– Equations of spheres,
cylinders, cones, surfaces of revolution
– Elementary properties of quadric surfaces
Scope of the Examination (2 of 2)
Calculus– Curve tracing– Velocity, acceleration,
rates– Radius and center of
curvature– Evolutes– Taylor’s Theorem,
functions of one variable– Series – tests for
convergence, expansion of functions, integration
– Applications to mechanics, center of gravity, moment of inertia, radius of gyration, attraction, fluid pressure, work
– Elementary differential equations, first order, linear equations with constant coefficients, orthogonal trajectories, simple equations of higher order
Preparations for Battle – West Point
West Point Team Statement“We are really series about this contest. We really mean it. We’re just dyne to meet those dumb Harvard guys, and we’re determinant to win. We all hope to make our integral signs.”
Preparations for Battle – West Point
From March 15 – May 20– Excused from parade 3 days a week– Excused from intramural athletics– Drilled in extra mathematics two afternoons a week
Preparations for Battle - Harvard
Confident of Victory Took a lighter approach Met with coach about four times Assumed Harvard intellects would easily
carry the day
Pre-game Publicity
Sports section of New York Times
“Sports of the Times” column by John Kieran on May 18, 1933
“The Coordinate Clash, or Block that Abscissa”
Other Headlines
“Army meets Harvard in Mathematical ‘Go’”
“Squads at West Point Begin Contest in Calculus and Analytic Geometry”
“Harvard and West Point Line up on the Geometry Field”
The Test
Part I – Friday, May 19: 3 hours– 11 problems: 6 analytic geometry, 2 differential
calculus, 3 integral calculus– Part II – Saturday, May 20: 3 hours– 11 problems: 1 logarithms, 3 analytic geometry,
6 differential calculus, 1 integral calculus
Not as difficult, nor as challenging, as the first National Putnam Examination given on April 16, 1938
And the Winner is…
“Crimson Bow to West Point Mathematicians”
“Harvard Mathematics Team Outfigured by West Pointers”
The After Math
All members of the Army team finished in the top 20 of their graduating class; seven of the ten spent over 20 years in the Army; most later became professors and obtained their Ph.D. None were mathematicians; all were engineers
Putnam’s Legacy
Harvard-USMA competition was not repeated Putnam’s sons, George and August, consulted
with George Birkhoff of Harvard to keep the dream alive
Birkhoff and colleagues from the department wrote the first national examination in 1938
Set up continuing principles for the competition– Teams consist of three people – Tests are administered by the MAA– Prizes are distributed to several top teams and individuals
Conclusion
“Through the efforts of Birkhoff and many others, and the experience garnered from the Harvard-USMA Competition of 1933, the annual William Lowell Putnam Mathematics Competition came into existence in 1938 and has prospered in the 50 years since.”
-David C. Arney and George Rosenstein
“USMA-Harvard Math Competition”, 2000
References:Arney, David C. and George Rosenstein. “USMA-Harvard Math Competition.” Available from
http://www.dean.usma.edu/math/about/history/mathcomp.htm
Arney, David C. “Army Beats Harvard.” Math Horizons. Sept. 1994: 14 – 17.
Kieran, John. “The Coordinate Clash, or Block That Abscissa!” New York Times 18 Mar. 1933: 17.
“Army ‘Mathletes’ Defeat Harvard, 98-112; Cadet Smith is First in Calculus Affray.” New York Times 5 June 1933: 4.
Email:[email protected]
Copy of Briefing Available from:http://www.dean.usma.edu/math/people/rickey/dms/doc/Putnam0-Isenhour.ppt