NATIONAL ACADEMIC CHAMPIONSHIP

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Contents
Origin and Early History
The Texaco Star National Academic Championship
Multiple-Location Format
Qualifications
Preliminary Rounds and Single Elimination Playoffs of the NAC
Gameplay
Winners of the National Academic Championship
The NAC Hall of Fame

Origin and Early History


The 'National Academic Championship' is the longest-running high school academic quiz championship in the United States. The competition was the brainchild of Chip Beall, president of Questions Unlimited, the nation's oldest (founded 1978) provider of high school quiz bowl competition and practice questions. Beall had competed in high school quiz bowl in the 1970s. He organized the Dallas-Fort Worth, Texas Whiz Quiz program in 1977.
Beall and several associates formed the nonprofit National Academic Association in 1983 to encourage the development of high school academic competitions as a means of giving bright high school students the kind of attention that was then largely reserved for student athletes. Beginning in 1983, the National Academic Championship has sought to assemble the nation's best quiz bowl teams each year to determine a champion.
Initially, the National Academic Championship was held at Dallas Baptist College, now known as Dallas Baptist University. Later rounds were recorded for television broadcast at a Dallas television station, with Beall serving as on-air host. The competition was held at The Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio for one year before Texaco sponsorship began in 1988.

The Texaco Star National Academic Championship


After Texaco began sponsoring the National Academic Championship, the tournament moved to The University of New Orleans for two years and then to Rice University in Houston, Texas, through 1994. Between 1989 and 1994, the final 16 games of the program were taped at the Houston NBC affiliate WKPRC-TV with Beall as on-air host. They were televised nationally through syndication and on The Discovery Channel. In 1990, the program was nominated for a Cable ACE award.
In 1994 - its final televised year - the program was renamed Star Challenge and hosted by Mark L. Walberg. In some local markets, commercial stations purchased the syndicated episodes, while in others, the show aired on PBS stations.

Multiple-Location Format


In 1995, the National Academic Championship moved to a multiple-city format. The two initial program sites were the University of Dallas, Texas and Marymount University in Arlington, Virginia. For the next few years, Loyola University hosted the first phase of the tournament, while Marymount hosted the final rounds.
Beginning in 2000, NAC added a third host site, ranging from Pepperdine University in Malibu, California from 2000 - 2002; The Drury Inn and Suites Hotel in St. Louis, Missouri, in 2003 and 2004; hotels in Chicago in 2005 and 2006, and a hotel in Orlando in 2007. Following Hurricane Katrina, in 2006 the second phase of the tournament moved to San Antonio, Texas.

Qualifications


Teams qualify for the NAC by either winning a tournament of 8 teams or more, reaching the finals in a tournament with 32 or more teams, winning any preliminary QuizNet match, winning the Questions Unlimited "20 Questions" contest, or making the playoffs at the previous NAC.

Preliminary Rounds and Single Elimination Playoffs of the NAC


At each site, teams are given six preliminary matches, usually playing 2 a day. All teams with 4-2, 5-1, and 6-0 records are then put into a single elimination bracket.
The winners of the Washington D.C. phase and San Antonio phase are then be transported, at the cost of the National Academic Association, to Orlando, where they are put into the semifinals at Orlando to play for the championship. The teams who come only to Orlando will play with the same preliminary round and single elimination process.
Recently, a new event, called "Who Wants To Be a Game Show Host?" was made part of the NAC, with the winners being offered jobs as moderators. All graduating seniors are allowed to try out, and the coaches of the teams who participated compete against each other.

Gameplay


The game is played in four quarters.
The first quarter, the "Warm-Up Round", consists of relatively easy toss-up questions worth 10 points each in the preliminary rounds, and 5 or 10 points each in the playoffs.
The second quarter, the "Bonus Round", consists of 10-point toss-up questions leading to four-part bonus questions. Each successive question increases in point value if the team answers correctly. The first correct answer is worth 5 points, the second is 10, the third is 15, and the fourth is 20. A wrong answer ends the bonus for the team that answered the toss-up and the opposing team is allowed to answer the question that was last read.
The third quarter, the "Sixty-Second Round" or "Lightning Round", consists of two sets of ten questions asked within sixty seconds. The losing team at the beginning of this round chooses one of four categories of questions and the winning team chooses one of the remaining three. Each question answered correctly is worth 10 points, and there is a 20 point bonus for answering all ten questions correctly within the time limit. After a team's sixty seconds has ended, any missed questions are given as 10-point bonus questions to the opposing team. This retaliatory period is referred to informally as the "bounceback" or "steal". One of the choices is frequently a "mystery" category; the final question of that category will sometimes be "Solve the mystery of the mystery category," meaning "how are all the previous answers related?"
The fourth quarter, the "Stump the Experts Round", consists of relatively difficult toss-ups worth 20 points each in the preliminary rounds, and 15 or 20 points each in the playoffs. At the end of this quarter, the leading team wins; if necessary, a 5-point toss-up question is used to break a tie.

Winners of the National Academic Championship



1983 -- Walt Whitman High School, Bethesda, Maryland

1984 -- Wheelersburg High School, Wheelersburg, Ohio

1985 -- Skyline High School, Dallas, Texas

1986 -- Irmo High School, Columbia, South Carolina

1987 -- Walnut Ridge High School, Columbus, Ohio

1988 -- Eleanor Roosevelt High School, Greenbelt, Maryland

1989 -- Paul M. Dorman High School, Spartanburg, South Carolina

1990 -- Collegiate School, Richmond, Virginia

1991 -- Paul M. Dorman High School, Spartanburg, South Carolina

1992 -- Booker T. Washington High School, Tulsa, Oklahoma

1993 -- Torrey Pines High School, San Diego, California

1994 -- East Brunswick High School, East Brunswick Township, New Jersey

1995 -- Governor's School for Government and International Studies, now known as Maggie L. Walker Governor's School for Government and International Studies, Richmond, Virginia

1996 -- Memorial High School, Hedwig Village, Texas

1997 -- Edison High School, Huntington Beach, California

1998 -- State College Area High School, State College, Pennsylvania

1999 -- James Island High School, Charleston, South Carolina

2000 -- Manheim Township High School, Manheim Township, Pennsylvania

2001 -- Irmo High School, Columbia, South Carolina

2002 -- Irmo High School, Columbia, South Carolina

2003 -- Horace Greeley High School, Chappaqua, New York

2004 -- St. Thomas Academy, Mendota Heights, Minnesota

2005 -- Holland Hall School, Tulsa, Oklahoma

2006 -- Byram Hills High School, Armonk, New York

2007 -- William Henry Harrison High School, West Lafayette, Indiana

The NAC Hall of Fame



★ Mike Keller (Irmo, 1985-1987)

★ Eric Evans (Granville, OH, 1988-89)

★ Jim Paluszak (Dorman, SC, 1989-91)

★ Matt Bruce (Booker T. Washington, OK, 1989-92)

★ Mark Staloff (East Brunswick, NJ, 1994)

Brad Rutter (Manheim Township, PA, 1992-95)

★ Brad Harris (James Island, SC, 1992-95)

★ Amanda Goad (Governor's School, VA, 1993-96)

★ Scott Petty (Houston Eisenhower 1995 and Houston Memorial 1996)

★ Justin Powell (James Island, 1995-98)

★ Ryan Cooper (James Island, 1995-99)

David Madden (Ridgewood, 1998-1999)

★ Jonathan Hess (Irmo, 1998-2002)

★ Sara Sheer (Horace Greeley, 2001-2004)

★ Matt Pargeter (Holland Hall, 2002-2005)

★ Nate Mattison (Byram Hills, 2004-2006)

★ Fuhe Xu (William Henry Harrison, 2004-2007)

★ Ariel Schneider (William Henry Harrison, 2004-2007)

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