Canada has a rich tradition of mathematics competitions at the national and provincial level. The primary organiser is the Centre for Education in Mathematics and Computing (CEMC) at the University of Waterloo, which runs the largest series of school-based math competitions in Canada.
Additionally, Canadian students can participate in the AMC/AIME (American Mathematics Competition) series, which provides the path toward the USA and International Mathematical Olympiad (USAMO/IMO) for the US track — though Canadian students who qualify through AMC can participate in the USAMO as international students.
The CEMC contest series is the most widely participated competition in Canada, reaching over 200,000 students annually:
| Contest | Grade | Format | Typical Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gauss | 7 & 8 | 25 MCQ, 60 min | May |
| Pascal | 9 | 25 MCQ, 60 min | February |
| Cayley | 10 | 25 MCQ, 60 min | February |
| Fermat | 11 | 25 MCQ, 60 min | February |
| Euclid | 12 (or any) | 10 long-answer, 150 min | April |
| AMC 8/10/12 | Various | 25 MCQ, 40–75 min | November |
The entry-level competition. Questions cover arithmetic, basic algebra, geometry, and combinatorics at an accessible level. Strong preparation for students who want to do well at Pascal and Cayley in the following years.
These contests cover the full high school curriculum up to Grade 10/11, with increasing emphasis on problem-solving creativity. Many questions require multiple steps and benefit from systematic approach rather than formula application.
The most important CEMC contest for university applications. It is a 150-minute, 10-question long-answer paper at a significantly higher difficulty level than Gauss/Cayley/Fermat. The Euclid is specifically used by the University of Waterloo Mathematics faculty as part of their admission process.
The Canadian Mathematical Olympiad (CMO) is the national olympiad, typically requiring qualification through the Canadian Open Mathematics Competition (COMC):
The AMC 10/12 (American Mathematics Competition) is administered in Canada through schools registered with the MAA (Mathematical Association of America). Many Canadian schools participate, and top Canadian students who score well on AMC can qualify for AIME.
Since Canada has its own competition pathway (COMC → CMO → IMO team), most Canadian students use AMC as supplementary preparation rather than their primary competition. The AMC's content overlaps significantly with the Fermat/Cayley/Euclid series.
Math competition performance is specifically noted by:
Our tutors have competed in CEMC and CMO and can teach the problem-solving techniques that distinguish competition performers. We offer Euclid-specific preparation sessions.
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