http://sites.google.com/site/marinvlada/ | http://www.ad-astra.ro/marinvlada | Projects: c3.cniv.ro, c3.icvl.eu | M.Vlada, Facebook, Twitter, icvl4all | http://unibuc.academia.edu/MarinVlada | New Technologies in Education and Research (2010) ISBN 978-3-8433-6391-4 | www.elearning.ro
Thinking, knowledge, life, and the pursuit of happiness - all that matters. Microsoft Academic Search | FORMULAR Feedback
Do not forget to be creative! This is an option and a way to happiness. https://picasaweb.google.com/marinvlada/
Thinking, knowledge, life, and the pursuit of happiness - all that matters. Microsoft Academic Search | FORMULAR Feedback
Do not forget to be creative! This is an option and a way to happiness. https://picasaweb.google.com/marinvlada/
Saturday, September 25, 2010
Romania&Bulgaria vs. Mathematics&Informatics
2010: Year of Mathematics in Romania.
- Centenary of Romanian Mathematical Society.
- An unique Journal in the world: Mathematical Gazette at 115 anniversary
Did you know?
1. Romania is initiator of the International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO) (1959, Brasov)) -
www.imo-official.org
2. Bulgaria is initiator of the International Olympiad in Informatics (IOI) (1989, Pravetz) - http://ioinformatics.org/index.shtml
3. Romania is initiator of Balkan Olympiad in Informatics (BOI) (1993, Constanta, 2003) - www.boi2004.lv, http://boi2007.edu.md, www.liis.ro/~marinel/Statistica.htm
4. Romania is initiator of Central-European Olympiad in Informatics (CEOI) (1994, Cluj-Napoca) - http://ceoi.inf.elte.hu
Note 1: “The International Mathematical Olympiad (IMO) is the World Championship Mathematics Competition for High School students and is held annually in a different country. The first IMO was held in 1959 in Romania, with 7 countries participating. It has gradually expanded to over 100 countries from 5 continents”. Source:
timeline: www.imo-official.org/organizers.aspx
Note 2: The first International Olympiad in Informatics (IOI) for secondary school students, supported by UNESCO, was organised in 1989. Thirteen countries took part in the first competition, held in Pravetz (near to Sofia), Bulgaria. A year later already 25 countries sent their teams, composed of four students and two team leaders, to Minsk, Belorussian Republic, Soviet Union. In the subsequent years the number of participating countries rose to almost 50: Anavissos (near to Athens), Greece, hosted ca 24 countries in 1991; Bonn, Germany hosted already 46 in 1992; Mendoza, Argentina hosted ca 43 in 1993, and lastly Stockholm, Sweden, hosted 49 in 1994.
Inspired by the fast-growing popularity of the IOI, the Romanian team proposed in 1993 to organise a similar event for the Central European countries (as a matter of fact, they have been organising the Olympiad in Informatics of the Balkan countries since many years). Shortly thereafter, Romania officially invited the teams of Austria, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia to participate in the first Central-European Olympiad in Informatics (CEOI for short). Five of these eight countries Croatia, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland and Romania sent their teams to Cluj in May 1994 where, upon special invitation, four more teams from Moldavia, Romania, Yugoslavia, and Turkey took also part in the contest. CEOI'94 was hosted by the "Tiberiu Popoviciu" secondary school in informatics, Cluj; the organising committees were headed by Ms Clara Ionescu and Dr Horia Georgescu.
http://ceoi.inf.elte.hu/intro.html
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment