Calculator Applications (UIL)
Encyclopedia
Calculator Applications is one of several academic events sanctioned by the University Interscholastic League
. It is also a competition held by the Texas Math and Science Coaches Association
, using the same rules as the UIL.
Calculator Applications is designed to test students' abilities to use general calculator functions.
Calculator Applications replaced the Slide Rule contest previously held by UIL.
For Grades 6-8 each school may send up to three students. In order for a school to participate in team competition, the school must send three students.
For Grades 9-12 each school may send up to four students; however, in districts with more than eight schools the district executive committee can limit participation to three students per school. In order for a school to participate in team competition, the school must send at least three students.
The questions must be answered in order; a skipped question is scored as a wrong answer.
Students are allowed to bring up to two calculators for use in the contest, provided the following criteria are met for both calculators:
In order for a question to be scored as correct it must be answered to the third significant digit with allowable error in the third digit of plus or minus one, except for integer, dollar sign, and certain stated problems requiring least significant digits.
Five points are awarded for each correct answer while four points are deducted for each wrong or skipped answer. However, questions not answered beyond the last attempted answer (defined as any problem where a mark or erasure exists in the answer blank for that problem) are not scored. In addition, at the high school level only, 3 points are given on stated problems involving inexact numbers that are answered correctly but with the incorrect number of significant digits, provided at least two significant digits are indicated and the more precise answer rounds exactly to the lesser precise answer.
There are no tiebreakers for either individual or team competition.
For individual competition, the tiebreaker is points on stated or geometric problems. Scoring for these problems, for tiebreaker purposes, is the same as for overall except no points are deducted for incorrect answers. In the event a tie remains, all remaining individuals will advance.
For team competition, the score of the fourth-place individual is used as the tiebreaker. If a team has only three members it is not eligible to participate in the tiebreaker. If the fourth-place score still results in a tie, the individual tiebreaker rules will not apply, and all remaining tied teams will advance. At the state level ties for first place are not broken.
For district meet academic championship and district meet sweepstakes awards, points are awarded to the school as follows:
University Interscholastic League
The University Interscholastic League is an organization that creates rules for and administers almost all athletic, music, and academic contests for public primary and secondary schools in the American state of Texas....
. It is also a competition held by the Texas Math and Science Coaches Association
Texas Math and Science Coaches Association
The Texas Math and Science Coaches Association or TMSCA is an organization for coaches of academic University Interscholastic League teams in Texas middle schools and high schools, specifically those that compete in mathematics- and science-related tests....
, using the same rules as the UIL.
Calculator Applications is designed to test students' abilities to use general calculator functions.
Calculator Applications replaced the Slide Rule contest previously held by UIL.
Eligibility
Students in Grade 6 through Grade 12 are eligible to enter this event. For competition purposes, separate divisions are held for Grades 6-8 and Grades 9-12, with separate subjects covered on each test as follows:- The test for Grades 6-8 covers addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, roots, and powers, including straightforward calculation problems and simple geometric and stated problems similar to those found in state textbooks.
- The test for Grades 9-12 covers the subjects under Grades 6-8 plus exponentiation, logarithms, trigonometric functions, inverse trigonometric functions, iterative solutions for transcendental equations, differential and integral calculus, elementary statistics and matrix algebra.
For Grades 6-8 each school may send up to three students. In order for a school to participate in team competition, the school must send three students.
For Grades 9-12 each school may send up to four students; however, in districts with more than eight schools the district executive committee can limit participation to three students per school. In order for a school to participate in team competition, the school must send at least three students.
Rules and Scoring
The test consists of 80 questions at the elementary and junior high levels (the number is not specified for the high school level but usually consists of 70 questions), which must be completed in only 30 minutes. There is no intermediate time signal given; at the end of 30 minutes the students must immediately stop calculator processing, but they are allowed to write one final answer on the problem being worked at the stop signal.The questions must be answered in order; a skipped question is scored as a wrong answer.
Students are allowed to bring up to two calculators for use in the contest, provided the following criteria are met for both calculators:
- The calculators must be commercially available models (models which were once available, but later discontinued, are still eligible).
- The calculators must be hand-held, operate silently, and be able to operate without requiring external power (rechargeable batteries are permitted but they must be charged prior to competition).
- All memory must be cleared prior to the contest (except for factory-installed memory; however, the machines must be calculators and not hand-held computers).
In order for a question to be scored as correct it must be answered to the third significant digit with allowable error in the third digit of plus or minus one, except for integer, dollar sign, and certain stated problems requiring least significant digits.
- For integer problems, in order for the question to be scored as correct the exact answer must be provided (there is no allowable error) and the answer must be in integer format (decimal points and scientific notation are not allowed and will be scored as incorrect).
- For dollar sign problems, in order for the question to be scored as correct the question must be answered to the nearest cent with allowable error of plus or minus one cent and decimal points and cents must be entered.
- For stated problems using inexact numbers, in order for the question to be scored as correct, use of the method of least significant digits is required, with allowable error of plus or minus one in the last significant digit.
Five points are awarded for each correct answer while four points are deducted for each wrong or skipped answer. However, questions not answered beyond the last attempted answer (defined as any problem where a mark or erasure exists in the answer blank for that problem) are not scored. In addition, at the high school level only, 3 points are given on stated problems involving inexact numbers that are answered correctly but with the incorrect number of significant digits, provided at least two significant digits are indicated and the more precise answer rounds exactly to the lesser precise answer.
Elementary and Junior High
Scoring is posted for only the top six individual places and the top three teams.There are no tiebreakers for either individual or team competition.
High School Level
The top three individuals and the top team (determined based on the scores of the top three individuals) will advance to the next round. In addition, within each region, the highest-scoring second place team from all district competitions advances as the "wild card" to regional competition (provided the team has four members), and within the state, the highest-scoring second place team from all regional competitions advances as the wild card to the state competition. Members of advancing teams who did not place individually remain eligible to compete for individual awards at higher levels.For individual competition, the tiebreaker is points on stated or geometric problems. Scoring for these problems, for tiebreaker purposes, is the same as for overall except no points are deducted for incorrect answers. In the event a tie remains, all remaining individuals will advance.
For team competition, the score of the fourth-place individual is used as the tiebreaker. If a team has only three members it is not eligible to participate in the tiebreaker. If the fourth-place score still results in a tie, the individual tiebreaker rules will not apply, and all remaining tied teams will advance. At the state level ties for first place are not broken.
For district meet academic championship and district meet sweepstakes awards, points are awarded to the school as follows:
- Individual places: 1st--15, 2nd--12, 3rd--10, 4th--8, 5th--6, and 6th--4.
- Team places: 1st--10 and 2nd--5.
- The maximum number of points a school can earn in Calculator Applications is 37.
Individual
NOTE: For privacy reasons, only the winning school is shown.School Year | Class A | Class AA | Class AAA | Class AAAA | Class AAAAA |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1980-81 | Lefors | Shamrock | Kermit | Andrews | Amarillo Palo Duro |
1981-82 | Ladonia Fannindel | Shamrock | George West | Daingerfield | San Antonio Roosevelt |
1982-83 | Lefors | Longview Spring Hill | Daingerfield | Carrizo Springs | San Antonio Roosevelt |
1983-84 | Sudan | Van Horn | Daingerfield | Andrews | Alvin |
1984-85 | Windthorst | Springlake-Earth | Taft | La Joya | (not available) |
1985-86 | (tie) Windthorst/San Isidro | (tie) Plains/Seymour/Liberty Hill | Longview Spring Hill | La Joya | Klein Oak |
1986-87 | Plains | Liberty Hill | Commerce | La Joya | Klein Oak |
1987-88 | Plains | Stamford | Commerce | Wichita Falls Hirschi | Klein Oak |
1988-89 | Plains | Stamford | Commerce | Wichita Falls Hirschi | San Antonio Roosevelt |
1989-90 | (tie) Plains/Westbrook | Van Horn | Bishop | Wichita Falls Hirschi | Lubbock |
1990-91 | San Isidro | Van Horn | Bandera | Carrizo Springs | Lubbock |
1991-92 | San Isidro | Stamford | Bandera | Azle | Lubbock |
1992-93 | San Isidro | Quanah | Bandera | Corpus Christi Flour Bluff | Odessa Permian |
1993-94 | Sterling City | Stamford | Bishop | Longview Pine Tree | Arlington Sam Houston |
1994-95 | Rule | Hamilton | Bishop | Gregory-Portland | Wichita Falls Rider |
1995-96 | Rule | Stamford | Bridgeport | Gregory-Portland | Sugar Land Elkins |
1996-97 | Henrietta Midway | Plains | Bridgeport | Longview Pine Tree | Pharr-San Juan-Alamo |
1997-98 | Henrietta Midway | Stamford | Bridgeport | Azle | Pharr-San Juan-Alamo |
1998-99 | Valley View | Plains | Santa Rosa | Gregory-Portland | Klein |
1999-2000 | Valley View | Plains | Bridgeport | Fredericksburg | McAllen |
2000-01 | Nazareth | Elkhart | Bridgeport | Pharr-San Juan-Alamo | Sugar Land Elkins |
2001-02 | Nazareth | Elkhart | Bridgeport | Pharr-San Juan-Alamo Memorial | San Antonio Southwest |
2002-03 | Plains | Elkhart | Bridgeport | Pharr-San Juan-Alamo Memorial | McAllen |
2003-04 | San Isidro | Valley View | Bridgeport | Pharr-San Juan-Alamo | (tie) McAllen Memorial/Sugar Land Elkins |
2004-05 | San Isidro | Argyle | Bridgeport | Azle | La Joya |
2005-06 | Garden City | Argyle | Bridge City | El Paso | La Joya |
2006-07 | Garden City | Ballinger | Longview Spring Hill | Mount Pleasant | Lubbock |
2007-08 | Lindsay | Tuscola Jim Ned | Bridge City | Nederland | Pharr-San Juan-Alamo |
2008-09 | Lindsay | Caddo Mills | Argyle | Corpus Christi Flour Bluff | (tie) Klein/Fort Bend Clements |
Team
NOTE: UIL did not recognize a team championship in this event until the 1988-89 scholastic year.School Year | Class A | Class AA | Class AAA | Class AAAA | Class AAAAA |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1988-89 | Plains | Shallowater | Bishop | Port Neches-Groves | McAllen |
1989-90 | Plains | Shallowater | Bishop | Azle | Converse Judson |
1990-91 | Sterling City | Shallowater | Bandera | Carrizo Springs | Lubbock |
1991-92 | San Isidro | Stamford | Ingleside | Carrizo Springs | Lubbock |
1992-93 | Westbrook | Quanah | Carrizo Springs | Longview Pine Tree | McAllen |
1993-94 | Rule | Stamford | Carrizo Springs | Longview Pine Tree | Lubbock |
1994-95 | Rule | Stamford | Bridgeport | Gregory-Portland | Sugar Land Elkins |
1995-96 | Rule | Stamford | Bridgeport | Longview Pine Tree | Sugar Land Elkins |
1996-97 | Henrietta Midway | Plains | Bridgeport | Longview Pine Tree | Pharr-San Juan-Alamo |
1997-98 | Rule | Plains | Santa Rosa | Azle | Klein |
1998-99 | Valley View | Hamilton | Santa Rosa | Pharr-San Juan-Alamo | Klein |
1999-2000 | Valley View | Hamilton | Bridgeport | Fredericksburg | McAllen |
2000-01 | Nazareth | Elkhart | Bridgeport | Pharr-San Juan-Alamo | Klein |
2001-02 | Nazareth | Elkhart | Bridgeport | Longview Pine Tree | San Antonio Southwest |
2002-03 | Plains | Elkhart | Bridgeport | Longview Pine Tree | San Antonio Southwest |
2003-04 | Henrietta Midway | Argyle | Bridgeport | Pharr-San Juan-Alamo | San Antonio Southwest |
2004-05 | Plains | Argyle | Bridgeport | Longview Pine Tree | Lubbock |
2005-06 | Garden City | Argyle | Bridge City | Longview Pine Tree | Pharr-San Juan-Alamo |
2006-07 | Garden City | Salado | Bridge City | Mission Veterans Memorial | Lubbock |
2007-08 | San Isidro | Elkhart | Bridge City | Nederland | Klein |
2008-09 | Lindsay | Elkhart | Argyle | Longview Pine Tree | Fort Bend Clements |