The National Scholastic Championship,[1] or NSC, is a high school national quizbowl tournament run by PACE.
The tournament began in 1998 and was the first high school national to use pyramidal tossups (by the standards of the time) and be largely written and run by people versed in the normal practices of collegiate-level quizbowl. From 1998 to 2009, the event used the Old PACE format, which retained the basic concept of "exclusively pyramidal tossup leading to a bonus" gameplay but added many non-ACF variations designed to incorporate elements of regional high school formats. From 2010 through 2019, matches consisted of 20 tossups and 20 three-part bonuses per round, with 20 point powers but no negs on tossups; each bonus was worth a total of 30 points, with bouncebacks on the bonus parts. Bouncebacks were eliminated to faciliate the NSC hosted online in 2021 [1], and will be discontinued at the in-person NSC in 2023 [2].
Archived results, including the roster of all-star students, can be found at http://www.pace-nsc.org/nsc-results. Official records for the NSC can be found at http://www.pace-nsc.org/nsc-statistical-records/.
Winners
Year
|
Champion
|
Runner-Up
|
Third Place
|
Fourth Place
|
Location
|
Field size
|
1998
|
State College
|
Henry Ford II
|
Copley & Gonzaga
|
|
Cleveland, OH
|
29
|
1999
|
State College†
|
Rockville
|
Detroit Catholic Central & Eleanor Roosevelt
|
|
Philadelphia, PA
|
22
|
2000
|
State College†
|
Eisenhower
|
Dorman & Riverdale
|
|
Greenville, SC
|
16
|
2001
|
State College
|
Georgetown Day School
|
Detroit Catholic Central & Detroit Country Day
|
|
Bowling Green, OH
|
22
|
2002
|
Richard Montgomery†
|
Detroit Catholic Central
|
Detroit Country Day & Eleanor Roosevelt
|
|
Washington, DC
|
40
|
2003
|
Dorman†
|
Thomas Jefferson
|
Detroit Catholic Central & Dunbar
|
|
Cleveland, OH
|
27
|
2004
|
Maggie Walker
|
Thomas Jefferson
|
Richard Montgomery & St. John's
|
|
College Park, MD
|
40
|
2005
|
Thomas Jefferson A†
|
State College
|
Mission San Jose & Thomas Jefferson B
|
|
Orlando, FL
|
31
|
2006
|
Raleigh Charter
|
Richard Montgomery
|
Maggie Walker & State College
|
|
Durham, NC
|
29
|
2007
|
Maggie Walker
|
Martin Luther King
|
Dorman & Thomas Jefferson
|
|
Ann Arbor, MI
|
36
|
2008
|
Walt Whitman†
|
Thomas Jefferson
|
Dorman & Wilmington Charter
|
|
Fairfax, VA
|
48
|
2009
|
Wilmington Charter
|
State College
|
Georgetown Day School
|
Maggie Walker
|
Fairfax, VA
|
64
|
2010
|
State College†
|
Maggie Walker
|
LASA
|
St. Anselm's
|
Fairfax, VA
|
64
|
2011
|
State College
|
Hunter
|
LASA
|
Stevenson
|
Evanston, IL
|
60
|
2012
|
Hunter A
|
Bellarmine
|
Centennial
|
IMSA A
|
St. Louis, MO
|
60
|
2013
|
Ladue
|
LASA A
|
Loyola
|
Dorman A
|
College Park, MD
|
72
|
2014
|
LASA A
|
Western Albemarle
|
St. John's
|
Ladue
|
Reston, VA
|
96
|
2015
|
DCC A
|
LASA A
|
Maggie Walker
|
High Tech A
|
Reston, VA
|
96
|
2016
|
LASA A
|
Stevenson A
|
Thomas Jefferson A
|
Hinsdale Central A
|
Rosemont, IL
|
96
|
2017
|
DCC A†
|
Westview
|
Barrington
|
Thomas Jefferson A
|
Rosemont, IL
|
96
|
2018
|
Thomas Jefferson A
|
Dublin Scioto
|
Wayzata
|
James E. Taylor
|
Reston, VA
|
96
|
2019
|
Thomas Jefferson A
|
James E. Taylor
|
University of Illinois Lab
|
Montgomery Blair A
|
Reston, VA
|
96
|
2020
|
cancelled due to COVID-19
|
2021
|
Thomas Jefferson A
|
Hunter A
|
St. Mark's
|
Richard Montgomery A
|
Online
|
80
|
2022
|
Lambert
|
Thomas Jefferson A
|
Kinkaid
|
Strake Jesuit
|
Rosemont, IL
|
72
|
2023
|
Barrington
|
Thomas Jefferson A
|
Hunter A
|
Belmont
|
Rosemont, IL
|
72
|
† Undefeated
Notes
- Third and fourth place were not distinguished before 2009; for 1998 to 2008, both teams listed should be considered semifinalists of equal standing and are listed in the table above by purely alphabetical order.
- The 2010 second place spot was originally awarded to Southside until Amit Bilgi was found to have cheated. Southside's wins were all forfeited, and all lower finishers were subsequently moved up one spot.
Medal count
|
- ↑ Prior to 2007, it was unclear whether the "S" in "NSC" stood for "Scholastic" or "Scholastics," and both words were used in various PACE materials. Since 2007 the organization seems to have settled on the singular form as the correct name of the tournament.