Just as our country's economy is on the brink of bankruptcy, the country's population is living in poverty, the government is dictatorial, and the press (that is, the globalist fake news factories) is being lied to as oppressed and persecuted (and we could go on and on about the false claims), they lie about Hungarian education in general. , including higher education.
The ELTE student won the international mathematics competition probably because our universities are of low quality. The underdog usually wins, don't they? voluntarily, we can recommend to their attention a few lines from Sándor János Petőfi's valiant work: we'll put it on."
But the facts, which, as we know, are stubborn things, must also be tested. Here is the announcement from ELTE:
"The student who graduated from the basic course of mathematics at ELTE won the 28th International Mathematics Competition for University Students (IMC), an international competition organized specifically for university students. Attila Gáspár finished first out of 590 students and was the only one to receive the prestigious first prize of the competition, the Grand Grand First Prize.
Due to the epidemic situation, the Mathematics Competition for University Students (IMC), organized online for the second time, is traditionally held every year in Blagoevgrad, Bulgaria, and has recently grown into one of the most prestigious international competitions for university students. During the online competition, the contestants had to solve four tasks on two consecutive days, under controlled conditions, and then the scanned solutions were electronically uploaded to the address provided by the organizers of the competition.
This year, 590 students from 160 universities in 51 countries on 5 continents participated.
The papers were corrected by an international group of team leaders.
At the competition, which ended on Saturday, August 7, Attila Gáspár received 70 points out of a possible 80 points, and was well ahead of the Russian, Dutch, Israeli and Polish competitors who finished in second place with 65 points and the Russian, Dutch, Israeli and Polish competitors who finished in third place with 60 points.
The performance of Dávid Matolcsi should also be highlighted: he won the split 11-15 with 56 points. finished in place. At the event, which is primarily organized as an individual competition, the students are rewarded with prizes based on their achieved score, and all members of the ELTE team (they are students of the basic and master's courses in mathematics at ELTE) performed well: Attila Gáspár received special, absolute first place, which earned him the Grand Grand First Prize, but in addition, according to the classification based on the scores achieved, Márton Borbényi, Kál Csáji Gergely, Benedek Kovács, Dávid Matolcsi, Kristóf Szabó, Levente Szemerédi, Tran Hoang Anh and Kristóf Zólomy also received first prizes, and Ágoston Győrffy took 2nd. earned an award.
The competition of 113 teams — calculated based on individual scores — was won by the team from St. Petersburg State University, the Israeli "team" came second, and the team from the Jagiellonian University in Cracow finished third. Among ELTE's two five-member teams, team A took 5th place and team B took 7th place.
The team Tamás Ágoston , a doctoral student at the ELTE Institute of Mathematics, and one of the main organizers of the competition Géza Kós , an assistant professor at the ELTE TTK Analysis Department.
Congratulations on the win and great results!