National Academic Quiz Tournaments
Limited liability company | |
Industry | quiz bowl |
Headquarters | Shawnee, Kansas, USA |
Key people |
R. Robert Hentzel (President) Seth Teitler (Chief Editor)[1] |
Services | question writing, tournament organizing |
Website | http://www.naqt.com/ |
National Academic Quiz Tournaments, LLC is a question-writing and quiz bowl tournament-organizing company founded by former players in 1996. It is unique among U.S. quiz organizations for supplying questions and hosting championships at the middle school, high school, and college levels. NAQT operates out of Shawnee, Kansas and Minneapolis–Saint Paul.
The company mostly writes practice questions and questions for high school and middle school invitational tournaments, as well as for some game shows. Its involvement in college quiz bowl is mostly restricted to sectional tournaments and the Intercollegiate Championship Tournament.
At the college level
The ICT is divided into divisions, unlike ACF Nationals, so that a clear undergraduate champion is determined (all formats allow graduate students to compete in some form).
Collegiate divisions
Division I Open
NAQT's eligibility rules state that any student taking at least three credit hours towards a degree at a university may compete on that university's team, and indeed may not compete independently if such a team exists. If no program exists at their university's campus, they may compete on the team for another campus of the same university, with the provision that they must leave that team should their home campus organize a program. In principle, a team can be as large as desired, but no more than four players compete at any time, and teams larger than seven players are rare.
If any member of a team has an undergraduate degree, the team competes in the Division I competition, and is only eligible for the open championship (i.e. the overall championship).
Division I Undergraduate
At Sectional Championship Tournaments (SCTs) and the Intercollegiate Championship Tournament (ICT), teams that do not meet the Division II requirements play together. However, awards are given, including bids to the ICT, for the top undergraduate team. A team is eligible for the undergraduate championship if all members of the team are undergraduate students, and none of them have played in four years of NAQT collegiate competition prior to the current year. The undergraduate championship was first awarded in 1998.
Division II
Also introduced in 1998, Division II is intended to give first- and second-year students an opportunity to compete against other players and teams of the same level of experience. Division II plays an entirely separate competition from Division I at the ICT, but SCTs where there are not enough teams may merge the two.
The rules of Division II eligibility are that one must be eligible for DI Undergraduate (i.e. no degree, and less than four years of experience), and in no year prior qualified for or participated in ICT. Some schools do not send teams for all divisions, and a student eligible for DII may compete on a DI team at an SCT or ICT. If he competes on a DI team at a 2006 SCT, and the team does not qualify for the ICT, he may compete in DI or DII in 2007. If he competes in a DI SCT again in 2007, he forfeits DII eligibility for 2008 and beyond, but may play in the 2007 DII ICT. In addition, if his DI team qualified for ICT in 2006, he could compete in either division at the 2006 ICT, but could not compete in DII afterwards. While this last set of rules are quite confusing, they are rarely needed, because a student who competes in D-1 one year rarely returns to DII the following year.
Exceptions to the eligibility rules have been granted to deal with special circumstances in past years; however, as they are controversial when they occur, they do not occur often.
Community colleges
Two-year colleges usually compete in separate SCTs each February (it is permitted, but rare, for teams from these schools to compete in DI). Eight teams qualify for the Division II ICT, where they compete alongside other DII teams in a manner analogous to that of DI Undergraduate teams. However, students at two-year colleges are exempt from the DII eligibility restrictions. In fact, they have three years of eligibility at the DII level.
Winners of NAQT Intercollegiate Championship Tournament
Year | Host / Location | Division I Overall | Division I Undergraduate | Division II Overall | Division II Community College |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1997 | Penn | Chicago | N/A | N/A | N/A |
1998 | Vanderbilt | Stanford | Swarthmore | Harvard | N/A |
1999 | Michigan | Chicago | Carleton | Princeton | N/A |
2000 | Boston U | Illinois | Princeton | Harvard | N/A |
2001 | WUSTL | Chicago | Princeton | Pittsburgh | N/A |
2002 | North Carolina | Michigan | Princeton | Yale | Valencia CC |
2003 | UCLA and Caltech | Chicago | Harvard | Cal-Berkeley | Valencia CC |
2004 | WUSTL | Cal-Berkeley | Illinois | UCLA | Valencia CC |
2005 | Tulane | Michigan | VCU | Chicago | Faulkner St CC |
2006 | Maryland | Cal-Berkeley | Williams College | Stanford | Broward CC |
2007 | Minnesota | Chicago | Carleton | Maryland | Valencia CC |
2008 | WUSTL | Maryland | Harvard | Carleton | Valencia CC |
2009 | Dallas, Texas | Chicago | Minnesota[Note 1] | Chicago | Northeast Alabama CC |
2010 | Chicago, Illinois | Chicago[Note 1] | Minnesota | Brown | St. Charles CC |
2011 | Chicago, Illinois | Minnesota[Note 1] | VCU[Note 1] | Yale | Chipola |
2012 [2] | Chicago, Illinois | Virginia | Ohio State[Note 2] | Harvard | Chipola |
2013 | Chicago, Illinois | Yale | Ohio State | Stanford | Chipola |
2014 | Chicago, Illinois | Virginia | Yale | Harvard | Valencia |
2015 | Atlanta, Georgia | Virginia | Maryland | Texas | State College-Manatee |
- Notes
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Though Harvard had initially won these titles, NAQT vacated their wins in 2013 after Harvard player Andy Watkins was found to have had unauthorized access to the questions prior to the tournaments.
- ↑ MIT had initially won the 2012 ICT DI Undergraduate title, but their win was vacated after MIT player Joshua Alman was found to have had unauthorized access to the questions prior to the tournament.
At the high school level
Teams qualify to the High School National Championship Tournament through a variety of methods. Most commonly, a team qualifies by finishing in the top 15% of the field at a tournament that uses NAQT questions. If a school wants to send more than one team to nationals, the school must qualify all said teams at the same time during a single tournament.
The small school award is given to a public school with a non-selective admissions policy and less than 500 students in grades 10 through 12.
Winners of NAQT High School National Championship Tournament
Year | Location | Champion | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | Small school |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1999 | Norman, Oklahoma | Detroit Catholic Central | Walton | Brookwood A | N/A | N/A |
2000 | Atlanta, Georgia | State College A | Maggie Walker A | Eleanor Roosevelt | Eisenhower | N/A |
2001 | Ann Arbor, Michigan | Detroit Catholic Central | Detroit Country Day | State College A | Riverdale | N/A |
2002 | Austin, Texas | St. John's School | Irmo | Detroit Catholic Central | Detroit Country Day | Kent City |
2003 | Myrtle Beach, South Carolina | Thomas Jefferson A | Dorman A | St. John's | Walton | Cutter–Morning Star |
2004 | Houston, Texas | Thomas Jefferson A | Maggie Walker | St. John's A | Detroit Catholic Central | Cutter–Morning Star |
2005 | Chicago, Illinois | Thomas Jefferson A | Lakeside | State College A | Solon | Danville |
2006 | Chicago, Illinois | Richard Montgomery | State College A | Maggie Walker A | Detroit Catholic Central | Danville |
2007 | Chicago, Illinois | Maggie Walker A | State College A | Thomas Jefferson A | Dorman A | Danville |
2008 | Chicago, Illinois | Thomas Jefferson A | Charter School of Wilmington A | Walt Whitman A | Dorman B | Russell |
2009 | Chicago, Illinois | Charter School of Wilmington A | Dorman A | State College A | Detroit Catholic Central A | Ottawa Hills |
2010 | Chicago, Illinois | Maggie Walker | State College A | LASA A | Bellarmine | South Range |
2011 | Atlanta, Georgia | State College A | LASA A | Bellarmine | Stevenson | George Mason |
2012 | Atlanta, Georgia | Bellarmine A | Detroit Catholic Central A | LASA A | Centennial | Beachwood |
2013 | Atlanta, Georgia | LASA A | Ladue A | Loyola | St. John's | Macomb |
2014 | Chicago, Illinois | LASA A | St. John's A | LASA B | Ladue | Hallsville |
At the middle school level
For the 2010-2011 academic year, NAQT has introduced a program for middle school. A corresponding middle school national championship, called the MSNCT, was held in 2011 at the Hyatt Regency O'Hare in Chicago. The first middle school national champion was Kealing Middle School.
Winners of NAQT Middle School National Championship Tournament
Year | Location | Champion | 2nd | 3rd |
---|---|---|---|---|
2011 | Chicago, Illinois | Kealing A | Barrington-Station A | Longfellow |
2012 | Chicago, Illinois | Kealing A | Longfellow A | Westminster A |
2013 | Chicago, Illinois | Barrington-Station A | Kealing A | Mesa Verde |
2014 | Atlanta, Georgia | Harmony Excellence-Houston A | St. Mark's | Trickum |
Jeopardy!
Various NAQT employees and former NAQT players have appeared on the game show Jeopardy!.[3] Over 30 NAQT players or employees have participated on the show, including 17 who qualified for the Ultimate Tournament of Champions, including two finalists, Brad Rutter and Ken Jennings. Jennings writes questions and edits the literature and mythology categories for NAQT. Due to the success of these players, adults trying out must now declare any affiliation to NAQT or quizbowl on their information sheet. (See Jeopardy! audition process for further discussion.)
In 2006, competitors in the High School National Championship Tournament were given the opportunity to audition for the Jeopardy! Teen Tournament and the Jeopardy! College Championship. Ben Schenkel of Moravian Academy (Allentown, Pennsylvania) qualified for the Teen Tournament at this tryout, and finished as the tournament's first runner-up.[4] Meryl Federman of Livingston High School (Livingston, New Jersey) qualified for the second edition of the teen tournament, called the Jeopardy! Teen Tournament Summer Games, and won.[5]