Difference between revisions of "Middle school quizbowl"
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In the absence of good-quality middle school tournaments, some middle school programs, such as [[Longfellow]], have historically taken teams to high school tournaments to varying levels of success. | In the absence of good-quality middle school tournaments, some middle school programs, such as [[Longfellow]], have historically taken teams to high school tournaments to varying levels of success. | ||
− | [[NAQT]] produced its first middle school set, MS-01, in 2011, and hosted the first annual [[MSNCT]], won by [[Kealing]], that same year. NAQT now produces | + | [[NAQT]] produced its first middle school set, MS-01, in 2011, and hosted the first annual [[MSNCT]], won by [[Kealing]], that same year. NAQT now produces four regular middle school sets each year in addition to the MSNCT set. |
The [[CMST]] was a set produced each year for four years beginning with 2009-10. | The [[CMST]] was a set produced each year for four years beginning with 2009-10. |
Revision as of 16:19, 24 February 2014
In recent years, quizbowl competition for middle schools has increased in prevalence.
In the absence of good-quality middle school tournaments, some middle school programs, such as Longfellow, have historically taken teams to high school tournaments to varying levels of success.
NAQT produced its first middle school set, MS-01, in 2011, and hosted the first annual MSNCT, won by Kealing, that same year. NAQT now produces four regular middle school sets each year in addition to the MSNCT set.
The CMST was a set produced each year for four years beginning with 2009-10.
Some bad quizbowl providers of middle school quizbowl include Questions Galore, the National Academic League, and Chip Beall's middle school program.