Difference between revisions of "Regular-plus difficulty"

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'''Regular-plus difficulty''' or '''regs+ difficulty''' is a [[difficulty]] level between [[regular difficulty]] and [[nationals]] difficulty.
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'''Regular-plus difficulty''' or '''regs+ difficulty''' is a term for the [[difficulty]] level between [[regular difficulty]] and [[nationals]] difficulty. The ambiguity on what constitutes "regular" difficulty has contributed to a corresponding confusion about where the boundaries of "regular-plus" lie.
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The use of [[ACF Regionals|Regionals]] difficulty as an equivalent to regular difficulty means that regular-plus is also called '''Regionals-plus'''.
  
 
==High School==
 
==High School==
 
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In high school quizbowl, regular-plus difficulty is generally defined by [[question set]]s like [[HFT]] and [[BHSAT]], which are intentionally more difficult that [[IS]] sets to facilitate higher-level competition and better prepare teams for nationals. NAQT's Division II [[SCT]] sets, often used at high school [[NAQT State Championships]], are also considered regular-plus difficulty.
In high-school quizbowl, regular-plus difficulty is generally defined by [[question set]]s like [[HFT]] and [[BHSAT]], which seek to facilitate higher-level competition than regular-difficulty sets and better prepare teams for nationals. NAQT's Division II [[SCT]] sets, often used at high-school [[NAQT State Championships]], are also considered regular-plus difficulty.
 
  
 
==College==
 
==College==
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{{Collegiate difficulties}}
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In collegiate quizbowl, regular-plus difficulty was previously used for tournaments intermediate in difficulty between [[ACF Regionals]] and [[ACF Nationals]], like [[2015 VCU Open]]. The number of tournaments that use this label has diminished in recent years, with the "[[nationals-minus]]" tournament taking its place. "3.5 dots" on the [https://collegequizbowlcalendar.com/difficulty-scale/ college quiz bowl calendar's difficulty scale] is sometimes used to refer to tournaments at this difficulty; however, this is not a recommended use of the difficulty scale, which intends each dot value to represent tournaments appropriate for a subset of the audience and not any specific difficulty.
  
In collegiate quizbowl, regular-plus difficulty most often refers to sets like [[CMST]] and [[Terrapin Open]] that are harder than [[ACF Regionals]] and easier than [[ACF Nationals]]. It is equivalent to "3.5-dot" difficulty on [https://collegequizbowlcalendar.com/difficulty-scale/ Ophir's scale], and is also referred to as "Regionals-plus" or "pre-nationals" difficulty. However, recent efforts to redefine "regular difficulty" have thrown the meaning of regular-plus difficulty into doubt.
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{{-}}
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==See Also==
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*[[Collegiate difficulties]]
  
==See Also==
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[[Category: Difficulty and quality scales for packet sets]]
*[[regular difficulty]]
 

Latest revision as of 13:26, 8 December 2021

Regular-plus difficulty or regs+ difficulty is a term for the difficulty level between regular difficulty and nationals difficulty. The ambiguity on what constitutes "regular" difficulty has contributed to a corresponding confusion about where the boundaries of "regular-plus" lie.

The use of Regionals difficulty as an equivalent to regular difficulty means that regular-plus is also called Regionals-plus.

High School

In high school quizbowl, regular-plus difficulty is generally defined by question sets like HFT and BHSAT, which are intentionally more difficult that IS sets to facilitate higher-level competition and better prepare teams for nationals. NAQT's Division II SCT sets, often used at high school NAQT State Championships, are also considered regular-plus difficulty.

College

College is Hard

In collegiate quizbowl, regular-plus difficulty was previously used for tournaments intermediate in difficulty between ACF Regionals and ACF Nationals, like 2015 VCU Open. The number of tournaments that use this label has diminished in recent years, with the "nationals-minus" tournament taking its place. "3.5 dots" on the college quiz bowl calendar's difficulty scale is sometimes used to refer to tournaments at this difficulty; however, this is not a recommended use of the difficulty scale, which intends each dot value to represent tournaments appropriate for a subset of the audience and not any specific difficulty.


See Also