SSNCT

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The Small School National Championship Tournament is a national championship for the nation's top small schools held by NAQT. There are two divisions: the Traditional Public Schools Division is for ordinary (non-magnet) public schools with no more than 500 students in their top three grades (up through 12), and the Open Division is for all schools that have no more than 350 students in their top three grades and are not eligible for the Traditional Public School Division. This policy is designed to allow for parity of competition between schools with fewer resources and funding, though the efficacy of this has sometimes been called into question.

Since 2017, there has been a Very Small Schools ranking within the Traditional Public Schools Division, for schools with no more than 300 students in their top three grades (up through 12). Such schools play with the rest of the Traditional Public Schools Division, but have separate playoffs (if necessary) to determine trophies within that group. There is no analogue of this in the Open Division.

At the 2013 HSNCT and earlier HSNCTs, Small School playoffs were held for Small Schools who had been eliminated from the overall playoffs, with the Small School Champion title awarded on that basis. The first few incarnations of the SSNCT had different structures: the 2014 through 2016 tournaments had only one division, for schools with no more than 500 students in grades 10–12 and inclusive of charter (but not private or magnet) schools, and the 2017 tournament had a Charter & Private Schools Division instead of the Open Division (with the main difference being the lack of any place for small magnet schools).

Qualification for the SSNCT is separate from, but similar to, qualification for the HSNCT.

Year Location First Second Third Field size
2014 Minneapolis, MN Hallsville AMSA Harmony Science-North Austin 50
2015 Atlanta, GA Harmony Science-North Austin Hallsville Glasgow 60
2016 Rosemont, IL AMSA Macomb Lehigh Valley 80

Traditional Public Schools Division (since 2017)

Year Location First Second Third VSS Champion VSS Runner-Up VSS Third Place Field size
2017 Rosemont, IL Glasgow Danville Camp Hill Camp Hill Raceland-Worthington Hallsville 96
2018 Rosemont, IL Glasgow A Ottawa Hills A Williamsville Ottawa Hills A Hallsville Cooperstown 96
2019 Rosemont, IL Glasgow A Middlesboro Ottawa Hills A Middlesboro Ottawa Hills A Bridge Creek 80
2021 Online Westmont Macomb Southside A Westmont Fair Grove Cooperstown/Pettisville/Ottawa Hills/Indian Lake 40
2022 Rosemont, IL Glasgow Herscher Garfield Garfield Fair Grove Westmont 55
2023 Rosemont, IL Fair Grove Southwestern A Woodland Fair Grove Southwestern A Garfield 77
2024 Rosemont, IL Hastings West Point Hallsville West Iron County Cottondale Morris A 88

Open Division (since 2017)

Year Location First Second Third Field Size
2017 (Charter & Private Schools) Rosemont, IL St. Mark's School of Texas Miami Valley St. Martin's Episcopal 30
2018 Rosemont, IL Early College at Guilford Friends Select Miami Valley A 64
2019 Rosemont, IL Miami Valley A Parish Episcopal High Tech A 72
2021 Online St. Mark's School of Texas Miami Valley A TAG Magnet 50
2022 Rosemont, IL St. Mark's School of Texas A BASIS McLean A St. Mark's School of Texas B 55
2023 Rosemont, IL Basis McLean A Alabama Cyber Tech St. Mark's School of Texas A 55
2024 Rosemont, IL St. Mark's School of Texas A Alabama Cyber Tech A St. Mark's School of Texas B 55