Difference between revisions of "Fall Novice Tournament"
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− | '''Fall Novice Tournament''' | + | '''Fall Novice Tournament''' was a novice-difficulty high school tournament written and edited entirely by high schoolers and/or rising freshmen in fall of 2009, 2010, and 2011, with logistical supervision from interested collegiate players who do not write for the event. Its goal was to provide an extremely answerable set for new players and novices in every region and expose interested contributing high schoolers to question writing in a controlled environment for the first time. |
− | Because it | + | Because it was a volunteer outreach effort, no fees were charged to hosts that use the packet set. However, this meant that all potential host sites must bid to use the set. Bids were used to ensure that the hosts comply with the principles of "[[good quizbowl]]", including the use of playoff structures that keep all teams engaged, eligibility restrictions to prevent obviously non-novice players from competing, and prompt reporting of statistics. It is believed that no bid has ever been denied unless it was in direct competition for teams with another already-approved bid. |
==2009== | ==2009== | ||
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|- | |- | ||
| [[North Kansas City]] | | [[North Kansas City]] | ||
− | | [[Smithville]] | + | | [[Smithville (MO)|Smithville]] |
| [[Lawrence]] | | [[Lawrence]] | ||
| [[Holden|Holden A]] | | [[Holden|Holden A]] | ||
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|} | |} | ||
− | + | ==2012 and beyond== | |
− | Fall Novice Tournament did not happen in | + | Fall Novice Tournament did not happen in 2012, with a lack of dedicated editorship among the cited reasons [http://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=13293&p=245953]. As such, [[SCOP Novice]] got a much larger mirroring audience. Fall Novice Tournament was discontinued in future years . |
[[Category:High school tournaments]] | [[Category:High school tournaments]] |
Latest revision as of 11:02, 27 July 2022
Fall Novice Tournament was a novice-difficulty high school tournament written and edited entirely by high schoolers and/or rising freshmen in fall of 2009, 2010, and 2011, with logistical supervision from interested collegiate players who do not write for the event. Its goal was to provide an extremely answerable set for new players and novices in every region and expose interested contributing high schoolers to question writing in a controlled environment for the first time.
Because it was a volunteer outreach effort, no fees were charged to hosts that use the packet set. However, this meant that all potential host sites must bid to use the set. Bids were used to ensure that the hosts comply with the principles of "good quizbowl", including the use of playoff structures that keep all teams engaged, eligibility restrictions to prevent obviously non-novice players from competing, and prompt reporting of statistics. It is believed that no bid has ever been denied unless it was in direct competition for teams with another already-approved bid.
2009
Inspired by online discussions of the inadequacies of A-sets at the time, the 2009 Fall Novice Tournament was a project aimed to create an accessible, pyramidal, and canonical tournament specifically designed for novice teams. Edited by Sarah Angelo, Charlie Rosenthal, and Zhao Zhang, the tossups were written in 12-point Times New Roman and rarely exceeded five lines, with few bonus parts exceeding two lines. It was overseen by George Berry, Charlie Dees, Donald Taylor, Andy Watkins and Dwight Wynne.
Several mirrors of the set were hosted across the country from September to December 2009, with individual hosts setting different eligibility restrictions. Overall, the set was well-received, with scattered complaints about difficulty outliers.
Results
Location | Champion | Second Place | Third Place | Fourth Place | Stats | Forum Link |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alpharetta | Dorman A | Hoover A | Chattahoochee A | Brookwood A | [1] | [2] |
Brandeis | Concord-Carlisle | Bromfield | Needham | Scab | [3] | [4] |
Illinois | Carbondale | Centennial | Bloomington | Scab | [5] | [6] |
LASA | LASA B | Cistercian A | St. John's Red | Seven Lakes | [7] | [8] |
Maggie Walker | St. Anselm's | Georgetown Day | Cave Spring A | Collegiate | [9] | [10] |
Saint Viator | Barrington A | New Trier A | Loyola A | Loyola B | [11] | [12] |
Walt Whitman | Richard Montgomery A | Quince Orchard | Thomas Jefferson A | Blake | [13] | [14] |
2010
George Berry oversaw the second iteration of Fall Novice, which was edited by Stephen Eltinge, Douglas Graebner, and Matt Jackson. Although eighteen bids were accepted from fourteen states and Ontario, Canada, only twelve of those sites were able to run actual tournaments.
Results
2011
George Berry returned to oversee the 2011 tournament with further oversight and difficulty-reduction by Charlie Dees. Its editors are James Bradbury, Lily Chen, Diana Gerr, Tanay Kothari, Aidan Mehigan, and Max Schindler. As of September 2011, twenty-one host sites in sixteen states, Ontario, and the District of Columbia were approved.
Results
2012 and beyond
Fall Novice Tournament did not happen in 2012, with a lack of dedicated editorship among the cited reasons [74]. As such, SCOP Novice got a much larger mirroring audience. Fall Novice Tournament was discontinued in future years .