They are pictured with coach Scott Woller. to r.): Parker Ried, Crandel Harder, AJ Arndt, Tanner Gebauer and McKenzie Smith. Wollerville Wombat team members include (l. WollerVille students also set a single day record with 6,013 correct math problems recorded on October 19. Woller gave a special shout-out to AJ Arndt who had the highest single player score of 7,997 correct answers over the three weeks. The Wombats had the highest per-student average across all three age brackets.
Hawley’s Magnificents in Ontario, Canada rounding out the top five teams with 798.66 points. The students in the Australian Math Academy in Australia took fourth place overall with 1,316.27 points followed by Mrs. The WollerVille Legends captured third place with a score of 1,377.93 correct answers per student. Prodigy said that more than 90,000 schools globally two thirds of them in the United States and the rest mostly in Canada, Australia and India have used it to assign math homework. The second place team was Virtual Queendom in Queens, New York City had a student score of 4,664.20. 23, they had an average student score of 5,996.20 correct answers. WollerVille Wombats were crowned National Champions on Oct. 5 to 23 and scoring was based on the average correct answers per student per team. WollerVille had two teams entered in the competition this year - the WollerVille Wombats and the WollerVille Legends. Competition takes places in three bracksets, grades 1-2, grades 3-5 and grades 6-8.
Competition is held on a global level with teams from Australia, New York City and Ontario, Canada in the top five of the competition for the grades three to five bracket. Medford students continue to show their mathematics skills and perseverance finishing in first and third place in Prodigy’s Kandi Korn National Math Tournament.Īccording to Medford Area Elementary School teacher Scott Woller, a total of 1,394 classes entered the tournament for grades three to five.