Re: Difficulty
Posted: Wed Feb 08, 2012 12:54 am
Either Grignard has just been clued as the son of a sailmaker or the definition of "stock" has changed.Superb_starling wrote:arguably the most stock clue ever
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Either Grignard has just been clued as the son of a sailmaker or the definition of "stock" has changed.Superb_starling wrote:arguably the most stock clue ever
Just because the current system is not terrible does not mean that it's wrong to even think about the potential for improvement. Can we please recognize the difference between "trying to make an okay system even better" and "claiming that the current system is horrible when it's not"?grapesmoker wrote:Why are people so desperate to invent solutions in search of problems? The current system works fine! It does its job of qualifying teams for the ICT, after which they can do things like go on to play DI like everyone else. But no, let's fuck everything up sideways because three people on the boards are dissatisfied with the difficulty level.
Here's the problem. Many (I'd guess most) players, unlike you and I, lose their enjoyment of the game when 7 or 8 tossups go dead every round and the bonus conversion drops below about 8/30 (these are estimates based on my observation; the exact cutoffs may vary). And for a lot of players who do quizbowl as a recreational activity on the side and don't have a lot of time to study for it, D1 is "too hard" because it takes a considerable amount of work for a team to reach that level on D1 questions. These people, unfortunately, will never be good enough to really enjoy D1.marnold wrote:It should be shouted from the high heavens that D1 is what matters. D2 is great as a way of bringing people into the activity, but all this hand-wringing seems to think that it's an end-in-itself. It isn't. It barely matters, honestly, because the idea is you're supposed to do it it once (or LESS even [shockhorror]) and then move on to real quizbowl. In fact, I propose D2 be made continually easier until it's just 24 questions about George Washington and the Mona Lisa so people will take the hint and play D1.
"Good luck."There is room for everyone in quizbowl. We should try to create maximum opportunity for everyone to enjoy it at their own preferred level of difficulty.
I think your suggestion from earlier in this thread is, in effect, logistically unworkable. The D-value system is an approximation to some ideal ranking of teams; I think it works well in general. The DI-to-DII and DII-to-DI conversion factors are an approximation to an approximation, and I'm not convinced they work nearly as well. They exist to deal with the (hopefully rare) cases when some team has to compete on the set from the other division due to circumstances beyond their control. The fact is that trying to compare teams across different sites is already a bit of a challenge; trying to compare teams across different sites that play very different sets, against teams that aren't competing for spots in the same division, is very messy.Sun Devil Student wrote:I offered an idea that could make those few dissatisfied people happy without negatively impacting anyone else. What exactly is wrong with that? If you want to argue why my proposal is logistically unworkable compared to the current system, fine. If you want to argue that my proposal is morally inferior to the current system, I'm happy to hear about it. But "the current system is good enough" should not be automatically a defense against all possible improvements.
Hey, maybe you can do us all a favor and go find the places where I (or anyone else) proscribed discussion or thinking about improving things? Because I have a pretty low tolerance for people inventing shit to attribute to me.Sun Devil Student wrote:Just because the current system is not terrible does not mean that it's wrong to even think about the potential for improvement. Can we please recognize the difference between "trying to make an okay system even better" and "claiming that the current system is horrible when it's not"?
Your system sucks, ok? It would result in massive confusion and headaches for all involved (so your contention about how it doesn't "negatively impact anyone else" is totally false, unless you assume that tournaments run themselves). It's not "morally inferior" (what?) it's just unwieldy and dumb and most importantly invents problems in order to solve them.I offered an idea that could make those few dissatisfied people happy without negatively impacting anyone else. What exactly is wrong with that? If you want to argue why my proposal is logistically unworkable compared to the current system, fine. If you want to argue that my proposal is morally inferior to the current system, I'm happy to hear about it. But "the current system is good enough" should not be automatically a defense against all possible improvements.
No, look, you're still not getting this. In fact, very few of you are getting this. Let me lay it out for you:Just as the "perfect is the enemy of the good," so "the good is the enemy of the great" - and we seem to have illustrated both phenomena in this thread.
Teams that never qualify for ICT won't have to move up. Look, the system works!Here's the problem. Many (I'd guess most) players, unlike you and I, lose their enjoyment of the game when 7 or 8 tossups go dead every round and the bonus conversion drops below about 8/30 (these are estimates based on my observation; the exact cutoffs may vary). And for a lot of players who do quizbowl as a recreational activity on the side and don't have a lot of time to study for it, D1 is "too hard" because it takes a considerable amount of work for a team to reach that level on D1 questions. These people, unfortunately, will never be good enough to really enjoy D1.
You can already be a permanent basement-dweller by not qualifying for ICT. The (entirely reasonable) assumption is that if you have qualified for the DII ICT, you can, in fact, hang with the better teams (or at least begin to work towards doing so), and so you're bounced out of DII. This is normal and fine! What are you complaining about?Some of you seem to think these people should be unwelcome in the quizbowl circuit. However, I think these casual teams still contribute to the community by being stepping-stone opponents for those D2 players who really do want to improve (and thus start out at novice level but over time get better and move on to D1), and if the "permanent D2 teams" are enjoying themselves and accepting of their place in the bottom half of the rankings, then that should be perfectly okay. Pushing them away from quizbowl with the demand of "enjoy D1-level questions or quit" (which is what you do by kicking them out of D2) is both unnecessarily unkind, and a loss to our community.
This is the truest thing. Look, like any pursuit, quizbowl requires work. Anyone can be a weekend warrior, and that's cool, but the community exists precisely because people are not weekend warriors, but rather because they enjoy the game and want to be good at it. If you just want to free-ride, you can, but no one is required to accommodate you, and you'll probably lose a lot of games. Them's the breaks.Susan wrote:But if those people are just going to quit playing quizbowl as soon as they can no longer play other novice teams because they can't handle losing to people who have put in more work than they have--and, yes, this is sometimes what people mean when they complain about having to play DI!--then, you know, fuck them. Those people aren't going to contribute to quizbowl, they aren't going to write packets for things, they're just going to be free riders and we should not accommodate them.
grapesmoker wrote:No, look, you're still not getting this. In fact, very few of you are getting this. Let me lay it out for you:
It's fine to think of improvements and even advocate for a wholesale restructuring of the game, if you think that that's what it takes. I've been part of those discussions, and sometimes, yes, that really is the correct position. But that was many years ago when people still thought CBI was a legitimate purveyor of quizbowl. None of the people you're arguing with here are naive idiots who (in my mother's words) fell to earth from the moon; we're all people with a lot of experience in both the writing and the organizational aspects of quizbowl, some more than others. What that means is that the current system was actually formed over many iterations of these kinds of discussions, where thoughtful people would select meaningful, concrete changes to achieve, put them forward, and there'd be reasonable, incremental progress. Which is to say it wasn't pulled out of our asses yesterday. People have considered lots of different options and they've settled on this system not because it represents some sort of global optimum but because it achieves a stated purpose (let the majority of newcomers play apart from more experienced teams) in a reasonable way.
This is the part that you and Joseph and Harrison seem not to be able to grasp for some reason, and it gets tiresome to rehash these debates all the time (as does your particular "woe is me" perpetual victim routine, by the way). You guys are coming in and making all sorts of wacky assertions and restructuring proposals which are manifestly unnecessary and may actually be detrimental. You want all these changes (many of which you can't even articulate properly because you're not actually sure what it is you want) and you've got various stab-in-the-dark proposals and you're not going to be restrained by anything so sensible as people with cumulative decades of quizbowl experience telling you that we're at a happy medium and to let it go. Why? Why are you so fixated on this?
Come on dude, no one made ad hominem attacks on you, and please, can we stop misusing that term? The problem is that when your first posts are something like "DII SCT is too easy, let's change everything," yes, people are going to think you're kind of nuts for suggesting that. I'm glad that you seem to have come to your senses, but can you see how having these kinds of discussions every year can get irritating? We wouldn't have to do this if people would just take a little bit of time to learn about why things are the way they are. Maybe we could have some sort of quizbowl Q&A thread where you can ask old people about the history of the game or something...What is it like to be a Batman? wrote:To be fair, I pretty much get this now, and I think if you actually read my last few posts you can see this. I didn't at first, true, but that's because a few people thought it would be more effective to come in and compare me to James Johnson and make ad hominem attacks rather than say "We've heard these arguments before, from X, Y, and Z, and they're wrong for reasons A, B, and C."
I don't know what to tell you about math competitions in high school, with which I have no experience, but I really don't see why we should worry about what goes on there. That's its own world and quizbowl is its own world with its own concerns; I'm no more inclined to cross-pollinate between those domains than I am to do the same with quizbowl and chess, so I don't think these analogies are useful. As for the rest, reports indicate that the difficulty of DII SCT is fine; perhaps it might be raised a bit next year, though I think a lot of difficulty perception is susceptible to noise fluctuations. Having large difficulty swings across a tournament is generally considered a bad idea because what'll happen is that you'll end up with those (let's say) 5 tossups going dead for everyone but the top teams, and that's worse than the top teams just answering everything earlier. Yes, there will be people who play DII who should have played DI, but play DII because they're eligible. So what? Why is this such a deep problem? They'll get their one year in and move on, just like everyone else did before them, and life will continue apace. This is what I mean when I talk about inventing problems to be solved: the system is already designed to move these people on up, so the absolute worst that can happen is that they play a single tournament once in their lifetime that is marginally easier than what their ideal difficulty level would be. In order to correct this total non-problem, people are proposing solutions that would almost certainly reduce the accessibility of the tournament and make it less fun for a whole lot of people; even if it didn't do that, it would be a huge organizational and writing hassle to do what you suggest.I still think that it might be better, if we're going to keep SCT DII at a lower average difficulty (or lower it further), to increase the variance of the difficulty of the questions, because there are going to be people playing DII who should be playing DI, and I don't think that making it better for them is entirely incompatible with making it fun for the total novice, lower-level DII teams. Yes, maybe I just fell from the quizbowl moon, but I've thought a lot about this shit w/r/t math competitions since high school, and at least in that arena, with a sufficiently large sample size, it's totally possible to end up with an approximation of a ranking at the top and still make it fun for people toward the bottom, and a proper gradation of difficulty is essential. Maybe quizbowl acts differently -- but I see no reason it should. In any case, I don't think this is any sort of "wholesale restructuring."
Funny story, as it turns out, even though I generally agree with you (Though I do think Marnold is contesting it being okay for people to spend a year in D2 if they're any good at all):Mechanical Beasts wrote: We're not contesting the point that "it's okay to spend one year in D2." The argument we're making is that if you're good enough at quizbowl to say 'HOW DARE CUP OF GOLD BE A LEADIN' then you have graduated from D2. The people who need to have finely gradated games on D2 questions are not all buzzer-racing on every STOCK LEADIN, because if you're fighting to qualify to D2 ICT, you most likely don't know that tier of clues.
I'm going to refer back to what you said here:grapesmoker wrote: This is the part that you and Joseph and Harrison seem not to be able to grasp for some reason, and it gets tiresome to rehash these debates all the time (as does your particular "woe is me" perpetual victim routine, by the way). You guys are coming in and making all sorts of wacky assertions and restructuring proposals which are manifestly unnecessary and may actually be detrimental. You want all these changes (many of which you can't even articulate properly because you're not actually sure what it is you want) and you've got various stab-in-the-dark proposals and you're not going to be restrained by anything so sensible as people with cumulative decades of quizbowl experience telling you that we're at a happy medium and to let it go. Why? Why are you so fixated on this?
The way I've been talking about things this whole time has been very deliberate to point out continually that the things I mentioned were nothing but little blips, and that overall the system is good. I've made no radically overhauling stab-in-the-dark proposal, and yet why not, accuse me of saying I'm advocating some massive overhaul to the system when I've said over and over that the system's fine, but that a few of the clues didn't help distinguish two teams' total knowledge because the set was written to be appropriately easy.grapesmoker wrote:I have a pretty low tolerance for people inventing shit to attribute to me.
Chris Ray wrote: some Alabama grad student's stock clue monocle
There were those 2, which were almost entirely directed at Harrison and served no logical purpose.Matt Bollinger wrote:considering those few posers who will play the tournament
This one was technically making a legitimate argument, but instead just made everyone think about how dumb James Johnson's ideas were. It'd be approximately like comparing the average intelligent republican to Sarah Palin, and thus it aims to invalidate everything they say by someone they stand on the opposite end of the same room as.Andrew Watkins wrote:See, this is the James Johnson sentiment alive and well.
I'm not keen for the metaposting discussion, but look at it in context: your sequence of posts basically reads like a litany of things you found problematic, and somewhere in there you sort of incidentally mention that yeah, actually the set was more or less ok, but then go on to list more things you thought were a problem. Sorry if that creates the impression that you think this set had problems! If I've unfairly lumped you in with people who think that SCT should be rejiggerred, then I apologize, but it sure sounded like that's what you wanted, because you said things like:The way I've been talking about things this whole time has been very deliberate to point out continually that the things I mentioned were nothing but little blips, and that overall the system is good. I've made no radically overhauling stab-in-the-dark proposal, and yet why not, accuse me of saying I'm advocating some massive overhaul to the system when I've said over and over that the system's fine, but that a few of the clues didn't help distinguish two teams' total knowledge because the set was written to be appropriately easy.
I don't know how else to read that.Superb_starling wrote:Independent of a DI field being forced to play DII, I also felt that the set was significantly too frequently stock and/or too easy.
Ad Hominem Posts drive like this, but posts without personal attacks drive like THIS!Fred wrote:Stop with the whole "AN AD HOMINEM POST GOES LIKE THIS HURR DURR HURR DURR", "NO IT GOES LIKE THIS HURF DURF HURF DURF" thing.
I thought I did a reasonably good job of pointing out I didn't think it was set wide, such as here:grapesmoker wrote:I'm not keen for the metaposting discussion, but look at it in context: your sequence of posts basically reads like a litany of things you found problematic, and somewhere in there you sort of incidentally mention that yeah, actually the set was more or less ok, but then go on to list more things you thought were a problem. Sorry if that creates the impression that you think this set had problems! If I've unfairly lumped you in with people who think that SCT should be rejiggerred, then I apologize, but it sure sounded like that's what you wanted, because you said things like:The way I've been talking about things this whole time has been very deliberate to point out continually that the things I mentioned were nothing but little blips, and that overall the system is good. I've made no radically overhauling stab-in-the-dark proposal, and yet why not, accuse me of saying I'm advocating some massive overhaul to the system when I've said over and over that the system's fine, but that a few of the clues didn't help distinguish two teams' total knowledge because the set was written to be appropriately easy.
And here:I wrote:Jerry's phrasing of this was accurate; current D2 SCT did divide the good teams from the bad teams on average, and therefore the occasional flaws it did have are statistically insignificant. The current qualification system does work fine, and the general difficulty of this set was fine too for where D2 players should be.
You pointed out the place in which I was most unclear about how this was not set-wide, in your post, and you're totally right.I wrote: That is, we should be playing D2 for now, and so we would rather it be enjoyable and good competition. Overall, it was.
In retrospect, that does look a lot like a system wide allegation; when I wrote it, it read in my head as something more like "There seemed to be more places in the set than I would have liked where things like Cup of Gold happened." In which it says there was the occasional problem, but not anything wrong with the whole set. I think at that point I wasn't particularly concerned as to whether or not my posts were an indictment of the whole set but rather was more interested in pointing out those few escapes.grapesmoker wrote:I don't know how else to read that.Superb_starling wrote:Independent of a DI field being forced to play DII, I also felt that the set was significantly too frequently stock and/or too easy.
This was the better indication from that first post as to where I stood on the whole set, though frequently is a less accurate word for how I felt about it than occasionally. I thought exactly that it was easy, which is right where it needs to be, but that it overshot in some places.I wrote:It certainly was easy, per se, but seemed to be frequently reactionarily too easy.
Le Monocle de mon Oncle?Superb_starling wrote:Chris Ray wrote: some Alabama grad student's stock clue monocle
Well, when James Johnson makes an internet forum career out of complaining about how it's impossible to compete with teams FULL of grad students, and then I come across a player incidentally from the same school complaining about a circumstance only mathematically possible if a team is at least somewhat FULL of grad students, both of whom are unaware of the fact that it's quite possible to compete with grad students, what can I do?Superb_starling wrote:This one was technically making a legitimate argument, but instead just made everyone think about how dumb James Johnson's ideas were. It'd be approximately like comparing the average intelligent republican to Sarah Palin, and thus it aims to invalidate everything they say by someone they stand on the opposite end of the same room as.Andrew Watkins wrote:See, this is the James Johnson sentiment alive and well.
Auburn and Alabama are two different schools.Mechanical Beasts wrote:Well, when James Johnson makes an internet forum career out of complaining about how it's impossible to compete with teams FULL of grad students, and then I come across a player incidentally from the same school complaining about a circumstance only mathematically possible if a team is at least somewhat FULL of grad students, both of whom are unaware of the fact that it's quite possible to compete with grad students, what can I do?Superb_starling wrote:This one was technically making a legitimate argument, but instead just made everyone think about how dumb James Johnson's ideas were. It'd be approximately like comparing the average intelligent republican to Sarah Palin, and thus it aims to invalidate everything they say by someone they stand on the opposite end of the same room as.Andrew Watkins wrote:See, this is the James Johnson sentiment alive and well.
Yeah, I was conflating Joseph with Harrison in my head, apparently, but that was a pretty irrelevant side point.The Hub (Gainesville, Florida) wrote:Auburn and Alabama are two different schools.Mechanical Beasts wrote:Well, when James Johnson makes an internet forum career out of complaining about how it's impossible to compete with teams FULL of grad students, and then I come across a player incidentally from the same school complaining about a circumstance only mathematically possible if a team is at least somewhat FULL of grad students, both of whom are unaware of the fact that it's quite possible to compete with grad students, what can I do?Superb_starling wrote:This one was technically making a legitimate argument, but instead just made everyone think about how dumb James Johnson's ideas were. It'd be approximately like comparing the average intelligent republican to Sarah Palin, and thus it aims to invalidate everything they say by someone they stand on the opposite end of the same room as.Andrew Watkins wrote:See, this is the James Johnson sentiment alive and well.
Nobody arguing in this thread agrees with James Johnson, something I think is fairly clear by now. Alabama is a team chock full of grad students who competes at and/or hosts every pyramidal quizbowl tournament they can get ahold of, and Auburn is a new team that is quite active against tough competition.
My idea was mainly intended to remove the perverse incentive for good D2 players to not be "gentlemen" at SCT because that's their only way to play D2 ICT, which is of appropriate level for them. (Or, if you want to be cynical, it removes the only plausible excuse for good D2 players to play D2 SCT, thus forcing them to play D1 SCT to avoid having their honor questioned.) But I'm persuaded by Seth's argument:Susan wrote:(self-selection and "gentlemans' agreements" and such have had a pretty spotty history in quizbowl and I suspect that this would work just as badly as previous examples have).
Seth, thank you for finally taking the time to explain why my idea was bad. When I wrote my preceding post, I was frustrated because everyone was completely ignoring my proposal without comment instead of actually engaging it and picking it apart with useful criticism. Obviously, the NAQT D-value conversion factors which I suggested expanding the use of are not as reliable as I had assumed them to be, and thanks to Seth, I now know something I did not before.setht wrote:I think your suggestion from earlier in this thread is, in effect, logistically unworkable. The D-value system is an approximation to some ideal ranking of teams; I think it works well in general. The DI-to-DII and DII-to-DI conversion factors are an approximation to an approximation, and I'm not convinced they work nearly as well. They exist to deal with the (hopefully rare) cases when some team has to compete on the set from the other division due to circumstances beyond their control. The fact is that trying to compare teams across different sites is already a bit of a challenge; trying to compare teams across different sites that play very different sets, against teams that aren't competing for spots in the same division, is very messy.Sun Devil Student wrote:I offered an idea that could make those few dissatisfied people happy without negatively impacting anyone else. What exactly is wrong with that? If you want to argue why my proposal is logistically unworkable compared to the current system, fine. If you want to argue that my proposal is morally inferior to the current system, I'm happy to hear about it. But "the current system is good enough" should not be automatically a defense against all possible improvements.
The upper end of the NAQT difficulty scale goes IS sets, DII SCT, HSNCT, DII ICT, DI SCT, DI ICT (in increasing order of difficulty). So your proposal that DII-eligible teams be allowed to play DI SCT to qualify for DII ICT means allowing teams to qualify for a national tournament by playing a harder sectionals set. I think this could easily cause problems in correctly determining which teams should earn bids.
I can imagine that there exist teams for whom DII ICT and DI SCT are pretty much right at their level--presumably some of the teams at the top of DII ICT each year are in this group, for instance. I would also imagine that some decent fraction of those DII-eligible teams would be able to qualify for ICT as DI teams, if they chose to do so. Now, if a strong, DII-eligible team wants to make a run at the DII title, I don't begrudge them that at all, but I do think it would be a mistake to make big (and I think problematic) changes to the current system just so they can play an SCT set that they'll enjoy more. In other words: if a team chooses to prioritize competing at DII ICT over playing the most difficulty-appropriate SCT set, I think that's fine; but I also think that's something the team chooses, and not a problem for NAQT to solve.
Jerry, I apologize for over-interpreting your accusation of solving non-existent problems as an indication that any suggested change was unwelcome. In the future, though, I would appreciate it if you (and/or everyone else more experienced than me, like Seth above) take the time to point out the reasons I'm wrong, because that's the only way new people like me can learn. There's lots of other discussions on this forum and I'm sure this won't be the last poor idea I propose, and those ideas should be refuted publicly instead of ignored, for the benefit of all the other new members of our community.grapesmoker wrote:Hey, maybe you can do us all a favor and go find the places where I (or anyone else) proscribed discussion or thinking about improving things? Because I have a pretty low tolerance for people inventing shit to attribute to me.
Since the current system is not globally optimal but rather is merely close enough to work most of the time, I think we should keep trying to approach that global optimum. Things like making the D1 set easier and having new graduate students start in D2 are some of the ways we're doing that. Letting D2 teams get D2 D-values on D1 questions has been rejected based on Seth's argument that it would decrease the quality of ranking for all the teams. But ideas that are not good today might work better in the future when the composition of teams nationwide changes (remember, graduate students used to start out in D1, etc). In order to get good ideas, you have to have a discussion that inevitably also produces bad ideas. All I'm asking is that someone who knows better, not necessarily Jerry all the time, but someone, take the time to educate less-experienced members of the community (like me) who are just trying to help. Again, Seth's post was very helpful in this particular thread.grapesmoker wrote:People have considered lots of different options and they've settled on this system not because it represents some sort of global optimum but because it achieves a stated purpose (let the majority of newcomers play apart from more experienced teams) in a reasonable way.
This is how the current system is intended, but it's not what actually happens. Some years, so many teams decline bids to D2 ICT that teams which normally shouldn't be promoted to D1 get promoted. This is an imperfection most people here accept because they place more value on having a full 32-team D2 ICT field than on perfect consistency in judging teams' readiness for D1 competition, but I suspect this may play a role in the disappearance of those Southeastern D1-promoted teams that you often talk about.grapesmoker wrote:You can already be a permanent basement-dweller by not qualifying for ICT. The (entirely reasonable) assumption is that if you have qualified for the DII ICT, you can, in fact, hang with the better teams (or at least begin to work towards doing so), and so you're bounced out of DII.
This is good, and if you can keep this up for a few years, along with high tossup conversion rates, a lot of those missing D1 teams might start coming back. I can say that the SCT site at ASU still had a considerable number of dead tossups but it was much better than years past, so the trend's in the right direction.Susan wrote:only one team (at least, out of all the teams that have stats up on NAQT's website so far) got less than 8ppb on this year's SCT
Well, not quite. They are contributing money in lieu of packets and studying effort. It is not completely a waste of time to accommodate them, they pay for the activities of the more committed teams, and they're fun to have around at local/regional tournaments. From the point of view of a college team, most of the local high school teams are basically "free-riding," and I think collegiate "recreational" quizbowl is worthwhile for much of the same reason as high school quizbowl.Susan wrote:Those people [free-riders] aren't going to contribute to quizbowl, they aren't going to write packets for things, they're just going to be free riders and we should not accommodate them.
Oh, believe me, I'm quite aware that it's possible to compete with grad students; I've beaten Mr. Sundberg in practice a few times. Also BARGE, but we don't talk about BARGE.Mechanical Beasts wrote:both of whom are unaware of the fact that it's quite possible to compete with grad students, what can I do?
Continuing the Me:James Johnson::Intelligent Republican:Sarah Palin analogy:Mechanical Beasts wrote:Well, when James Johnson makes an internet forum career out of complaining about how it's impossible to compete with teams FULL of grad students, and then I come across a player incidentally from the same school complaining about a circumstance only mathematically possible if a team is at least somewhat FULL of grad students, both of whom are unaware of the fact that it's quite possible to compete with grad students, what can I do?Superb_starling wrote:This one was technically making a legitimate argument, but instead just made everyone think about how dumb James Johnson's ideas were. It'd be approximately like comparing the average intelligent republican to Sarah Palin, and thus it aims to invalidate everything they say by someone they stand on the opposite end of the same room as.Andrew Watkins wrote:See, this is the James Johnson sentiment alive and well.
No, it was literally an accusation of solving non-existent problems!Sun Devil Student wrote: Jerry, I apologize for over-interpreting your accusation of solving non-existent problems as an indication that any suggested change was unwelcome.
I'm not saying "don't have discussions" or whatever it is you think I'm trying to tell you. What I'm asking you is this: what specific problem are you trying to solve? The problem of easy DII questions? The problem of people playing DI who are not very good? I mean, the problem with this whole conversation (indeed, the problem with almost all quizbowl conversations) is that it's quite difficult to actually pin people down to what they want. It's not just some theoretical debate about global optima (a term I now regret using), it's that no one has actually put forth any reasonable description of what such an optimum would look like. Looking back at your previous two posts in this thread, I still have no idea what you're trying to achieve and why. All I know is that you made a suggestion that is practically unworkable and would probably be detrimental to the circuit in order to... do what? Fix what specific problem that you think exists here?Since the current system is not globally optimal but rather is merely close enough to work most of the time, I think we should keep trying to approach that global optimum. Things like making the D1 set easier and having new graduate students start in D2 are some of the ways we're doing that. Letting D2 teams get D2 D-values on D1 questions has been rejected based on Seth's argument that it would decrease the quality of ranking for all the teams. But ideas that are not good today might work better in the future when the composition of teams nationwide changes (remember, graduate students used to start out in D1, etc). In order to get good ideas, you have to have a discussion that inevitably also produces bad ideas. All I'm asking is that someone who knows better, not necessarily Jerry all the time, but someone, take the time to educate less-experienced members of the community (like me) who are just trying to help. Again, Seth's post was very helpful in this particular thread.
These are, for the most part, corner cases. Yes, it will happen that sometimes a team will qualify and be bumped up. Everyone knows this risk going in. I find it not-terribly-believable that the inability to play what is effectively, at best, two tournaments a year on DII questions against DII opposition is really what drives the disappearance of these teams. And if it does, if teams really go out of business because they can't play novice questions anymore on account of not being novices, then I'm ok with that! At some point, the hand holding has got to stop! Fortunately most teams make the transition pretty well, and we don't need to bend over backwards to accommodate those few that don't because they don't want to do things that other teams do like practice and attend collegiate tournaments.This is how the current system is intended, but it's not what actually happens. Some years, so many teams decline bids to D2 ICT that teams which normally shouldn't be promoted to D1 get promoted. This is an imperfection most people here accept because they place more value on having a full 32-team D2 ICT field than on perfect consistency in judging teams' readiness for D1 competition, but I suspect this may play a role in the disappearance of those Southeastern D1-promoted teams that you often talk about.
I just want to know if you have any familiarity with the southeast circuit at all. How does it come to pass that other schools all across the country somehow manage to make this transition and yet only one region remains outstanding?The combination of these two things, I'll take a wild guess here, accounts for the Southeast's chronic shortage of D1 teams.
There's something that a lot of people in this discussion and in quizbowl in general don't understand: quizbowl's real currency is not money, it's time and effort. Quizbowl, at its core, is voluntaristic, because no one derives enough income from it to put in the kind of time and effort that most editors put in. Yeah, a team showed up and paid some money, that's great. However, if that team isn't attending tournaments regularly (which is how you improve) and hosting tournaments, then it's really not contributing very much to the circuit at all. Those $200 paid once a year or whatever it is to play SCT aren't doing anyone any favors; the influence of that money is so diluted that it barely matters. If you're not contributing to the health of the community by hosting and attending tournaments, you don't really have a voice, because no one needs your $200 divided among god knows how many editors so badly that they're going to change everything around for you. Teams that just do what you describe definitionally live at the margins of the game, and do so more or less by choice.Well, not quite. They are contributing money in lieu of packets and studying effort. It is not completely a waste of time to accommodate them, they pay for the activities of the more committed teams, and they're fun to have around at local/regional tournaments. From the point of view of a college team, most of the local high school teams are basically "free-riding," and I think collegiate "recreational" quizbowl is worthwhile for much of the same reason as high school quizbowl.
From what I see in practice, we don't really drop off from the D1 sets to the D2 sets. I'm not saying we would power 10 a game or have 26 PPB for a tournament or anything ridiculous like that, but we consistently put up 20-23 PPB per packet when we (the usual suspects + Harrison) play unread D1 SCT packets in practice (later rounds from previous SCTs). We had Harrison play D2 because the region couldn't get enough four teams together for a separate sectional. Since the field was doomed to be combined, we figured we should give ourselves the best possible chance to qualify a D1 and D2 team for ICT. In addition, this helped to boost the field strength enough to where hopefully you guys can snag a berth at ICT, too. If we had played a combined field with Harrison playing on A, I think the overall field strength would have gone down a bit. I felt the fact that we played on D2 questions gave teams a better chance to beat us than they would on regular difficulty because of extremely famous stock clues being dropped in the first line, and other non-issues that occur at tournaments like the DII SCT.Superb_starling wrote: That said, I don't think I'm very far off -- probably no more than a year -- from being able to compete consistently with Jake et al. either; Like I may have said before, that 520 point loss was statistically much further apart than we actually are from Alabama A(P/N and PPB spiked for them in that match, not to mention there was only one match where they powered more questions than that one IIRC), and I actually think we'd be better suited to play them on the D1 set than D2.
I've seen Auburn play. You guys are good and should play in as many tournaments as you possibly can regardless of whether or not you'll have to play against some (presently) better teams. With very few exceptions, the best college players and teams have lost badly to more experienced teams at some point. And frankly, it's hard to think of too many really good teams that actively avoided good competition in their freshman and sophomore years. The best players and teams get motivated by those losses and, through the magic of spite, eventually devour the souls of the teams that once tormented them. In all seriousness, you can get a lot out of playing teams that are better than you, and it is satisfying to beat the teams that once beat you. Play in as many tournaments as you can, and this will happen sooner than you think.Superb_starling wrote: The tense is key in understanding what I meant on this part; We are not, in the present, ready to compete with teams who combine for more years of college quiz bowl experience than number of years I've been alive. We will be, and we're moving towards this, but for now, we belong in DII, if just for this year, because we still have freshman problems, and we just frankly haven't had enough time. We aren't going to hide from established programs, per se, but it makes no sense for us to try and play against teams currently well over our head as we work to become better.
Joey and I are actually split as to whether or not we should play D1 or D2 next year, and I'm the one arguing that next year we should play D1, independent of whether or not we qualify for ICT. But this year, we simply aren't good enough to go and try and compete with the D1 teams in our region, as evidenced by our results against the two D1 teams at our site.
I can't echo what Jerry's said here strongly enough (though I'd add "writing packets" as another key factor in circuit participation). The idea of "recreational" participation in quizbowl (I think this is a problematic term, since quizbowl is a recreational activity for people who take it seriously as well, but all of the other terms I can think of at the moment are pejorative so "recreational" in scare quotes it'll be) works on a micro level but not a macro level, I think. Clubs can benefit from the presence of "recreational" players, even if those players aren't really interested in attending a lot of tournaments or working to get better--maybe these players help out when the club's hosting tournaments, or help fill out an undermanned team now and again, or maybe they're fun to hang out with and that keeps people coming to practice--but the circuit does not benefit from teams that don't attend tournaments regularly, host tournaments, and write packets. And even at the club-player level, a more active/engaged player is always superior to a "recreational" player because they contribute more to the team (everything the "recreational" player does, plus writing packets, working to get better and promoting tournament attendance/hosting). I continue to think that any efforts to appease players/teams who don't contribute to the circuit are ultimately not a good use of the circuit's resources.Jerry wrote:There's something that a lot of people in this discussion and in quizbowl in general don't understand: quizbowl's real currency is not money, it's time and effort. Quizbowl, at its core, is voluntaristic, because no one derives enough income from it to put in the kind of time and effort that most editors put in. Yeah, a team showed up and paid some money, that's great. However, if that team isn't attending tournaments regularly (which is how you improve) and hosting tournaments, then it's really not contributing very much to the circuit at all. Those $200 paid once a year or whatever it is to play SCT aren't doing anyone any favors; the influence of that money is so diluted that it barely matters. If you're not contributing to the health of the community by hosting and attending tournaments, you don't really have a voice, because no one needs your $200 divided among god knows how many editors so badly that they're going to change everything around for you. Teams that just do what you describe definitionally live at the margins of the game, and do so more or less by choice.
The problem of super-good D2 players having to endure a too-easy D2 SCT question set in order to be able to compete at D2 ICT. (I understand that you don't consider this to be a problem, but I was responding to the fact that other people perceived it to be. Anything that has a "national championship" will get importance attached to it, even if it's something that shouldn't, like D2 - and you see enough value in having D2 ICT to tolerate the side effects, right?)grapesmoker wrote:what specific problem are you trying to solve?
The D2 players who complained about the D2 SCT being too easy are probably pretty good contributors in terms of packet writing and such. There may be better ways to appease them than what I suggested (or maybe on this point there isn't any good way) but at least we tried.Susan wrote:I continue to think that any efforts to appease players/teams who don't contribute to the circuit are ultimately not a good use of the circuit's resources.
No, I meant what I said about taking a wild guess - I live in the southwest, not the southeast. In my own experience, my team (ASU) has lost many potentially good players because of the high level of time commitment required to enjoy regular-difficulty (or D1-level), and I speculate that this same effect occurs with other novice teams around the country, including the Southeast. I was hoping an actual Southeasterner might be able to confirm or deny this from their own observations on the ground. Fortunately, ASU had enough new recruits initially that the small fraction who stuck it out were still enough to make a viable organization, but at smaller schools I can see how organizations might end up being too small to sustain themselves.grapesmoker wrote:I just want to know if you have any familiarity with the southeast circuit at all. How does it come to pass that other schools all across the country somehow manage to make this transition and yet only one region remains outstanding?
Writing packets is exactly what makes ACF tournaments smaller than NAQT tournaments. Sure the ACF circuit does not need to accommodate the non-contributing teams or let them have a voice, but I don't know if NAQT should take the same attitude, as those teams are a significant part of NAQT's audience (though not ACF's). One tournament a year isn't much, but it's still better than nothing. (And the ACF circuit does require a lot more time and effort to sustain because it has several tournaments per year, while NAQT has only the one regional and one national at the college level.)Susan wrote:"writing packets" as another key factor in circuit participation
So on the heels of this, do you agree or disagree with the bullet-points I outlined above? It's in line with NAQT's thinking on the matter, and it seems like I've been able to persuade the other few people in the thread who saw this as problematic (I think).Sun Devil Student wrote:The problem of super-good D2 players having to endure a too-easy D2 SCT question set in order to be able to compete at D2 ICT. (I understand that you don't consider this to be a problem, but I was responding to the fact that other people perceived it to be. Anything that has a "national championship" will get importance attached to it, even if it's something that shouldn't, like D2 - and you see enough value in having D2 ICT to tolerate the side effects, right?)grapesmoker wrote:what specific problem are you trying to solve?
Writing packets is how you stay engaged with the circuit. NAQT runs two college tournaments per year. If you have any interest in being part of the college quizbowl circuit, you attend tournaments and most of them require packet submission. NAQT is not some kind of separate entity that exists above and beyond the regular circuit. Of course a team can only play the few NAQT tournaments each year and do nothing but, but that's not conducive to circuit-building, which is something that's in the mutual interests of both NAQT and other circuit teams. So the answer here is that even if NAQT could somehow accommodate people who want to live in DII perpetually (at the same time as accommodating people who find it too easy?) it still shouldn't do that because it hampers circuit development, producing teams who don't really go on to contribute in a meaningful way.Writing packets is exactly what makes ACF tournaments smaller than NAQT tournaments. Sure the ACF circuit does not need to accommodate the non-contributing teams or let them have a voice, but I don't know if NAQT should take the same attitude, as those teams are a significant part of NAQT's audience (though not ACF's). One tournament a year isn't much, but it's still better than nothing. (And the ACF circuit does require a lot more time and effort to sustain because it has several tournaments per year, while NAQT has only the one regional and one national at the college level.)
Absolutely true, but it misses the point. I think Kyle mentioned upthread that the convenience of DII SCT is that once you're really too good at it, your eligibility to play it dries right up, and then you play the tournament designed for people who might complain if they had to play D2. The only people who really need appeasing, like what you propose, are people who want to play questions easier than DI indefinitely. Those are, almost 100% of the time, non-contributing players.Sun Devil Student wrote:The D2 players who complained about the D2 SCT being too easy are probably pretty good contributors in terms of packet writing and such. There may be better ways to appease them than what I suggested (or maybe on this point there isn't any good way) but at least we tried.Susan wrote:I continue to think that any efforts to appease players/teams who don't contribute to the circuit are ultimately not a good use of the circuit's resources.
I see nothing wrong with this, but I'm not a "good D2 player" so they're really the ones who should agree with this - if most of them do, it's all good.grapesmoker wrote:
- The DII SCT is designed to achieve certain limited goals, namely, allowing players new to quizbowl to compete amongst themselves rather than against more experienced teams.
- It does so by lowering the difficulty of the questions, possibly to the point where the questions may end up being relatively easy for many of the teams that qualify for the ICT.
- This is an acceptable compromise because otherwise the set would be much less accessible to inexperienced players overall, and also because players for whom DII is too easy will qualify and move on to DI anyway.
I think this conclusion is contingent on the assumption that the lowered D1 SCT difficulty is now low enough to catch the vast majority of teams which previously failed to make the jump from D2 SCT, so I'll say "agree" for now but we should watch what happens for the next few years. I'd be interested to see if this results in an explosion of new D1 teams, which would be great. (It might help even more if ACF Regionals difficulty was also lowered to match the new D1 SCT level but this again is for you to judge.)grapesmoker wrote:
- As a consequence of points 1-3, there isn't any necessity to change the structure of the tournament or any of the qualification rules.
This description is true of the vast majority of high school players nationwide. High school teams occasionally have a temporary bump in competitiveness because one or two very enthusiastic individuals pass through and then return to average high school level when those players graduate. Why treat college D2 teams any differently? The difference I suppose is that high schools have multiple NAQT IS-tournaments (or equivalents) to go to, which helps make them more like year-round organizations, while a permanent college D2 team has only one D2 SCT per year. Suppose there were two D2 SCTs every semester, or ACF Fall's that required a half-packet submission instead of a full packet each? But that's probably beyond the scope of this thread.Mechanical Beasts wrote:people who want to play questions easier than DI indefinitely. Those are, almost 100% of the time, non-contributing players.
Perhaps this phrase implies something different to you than it does for other people, but this in fact was not an ad hominem argument. It was also like, not at all directed "almost entirely" at Harrison, because it is a caricature of a hypothetical Alabama grad student, and to my knowledge Harrison is both tangible and an undergrad. This image was meant to evoke the comically significant degree to which we all should not give a fuck about whether a grad student playing DII questions finds them too easy, at least as far as changing DII difficulty is concerned. I continue to find the arguments raised by both you and Harrison underwhelming, repetitive, and somewhat frustratingly intractable (contrary to what you've professed, I really don't see where you've departed from the central thesis here). I'm not making any value judgments about people who play DII generally or you guys in particular, and don't appreciate being lumped in as such.Superb_starling wrote:
On a lighter, much less angry note, the ad hominem arguments to which Harrison refers:There were those 2, which were almost entirely directed at Harrison and served no logical purpose.Chris Ray wrote: some Alabama grad student's stock clue monocle
I think it would be good if NAQT did something like this is in the future, mainly because the NAQT brand is easily the most recognizable name in pyramidal quizbowl at both the collegiate and high school levels (a lot of people still refer to good quizbowl as "NAQT format") and would draw in some teams simply because of that. It might help keep teams from falling into the trap of only playing SCT (and maybe ICT) every year, because every time a team goes to any quizbowl tournament they can run into teams that post on this board and go to a lot of events, and it gives everyone more opportunities to encourage those newer or less active teams to become more particpatory members of the community.bt_green_warbler wrote:Note that in the distant past (2000 and earlier) NAQT did produce an additional college set for use in the fall.
I'll bite. First of all, I think Jerry is a bit off in framing the lack of transition to DI as a Southeast-only issue. Looking across the country, I’m not overly impressed with the size of the other DI fields either. There seem to be several other combined fields and no DI field had more than 7 teams. Also, it should be noted that certifiable Southeast schools Vandy and GT played in the Blacksburg sectional. And Florida hosted SCT, thus depriving that sectional of one of its very best DI teams. And the only reason South Carolina didn't play in the SCT is the most mundane reason in the world: money, or lack thereof. Given our limited funds, we decided to put our resources towards ACF-style events for 2011-2012. So let’s don’t crap on the Southeast’s DI attendance too hard. The Southeast certainly wasn't lighting things up with DI attendance this year, but I think most teams in the country would get their competition's worth going against the best DI teams in the region.Sun Devil Student wrote:No, I meant what I said about taking a wild guess - I live in the southwest, not the southeast. In my own experience, my team (ASU) has lost many potentially good players because of the high level of time commitment required to enjoy regular-difficulty (or D1-level), and I speculate that this same effect occurs with other novice teams around the country, including the Southeast. I was hoping an actual Southeasterner might be able to confirm or deny this from their own observations on the ground. Fortunately, ASU had enough new recruits initially that the small fraction who stuck it out were still enough to make a viable organization, but at smaller schools I can see how organizations might end up being too small to sustain themselves.grapesmoker wrote:I just want to know if you have any familiarity with the southeast circuit at all. How does it come to pass that other schools all across the country somehow manage to make this transition and yet only one region remains outstanding?
I think the answer is something like continuing to produce future SCT sets in the mold of this year's kinder, gentler set, expanding the DII ICT field when it seems warranted, then expanding the DI ICT field when it seems warranted--I'm imagining that DII will grow first, then the number of DI teams at SCT will expand slowly, then at some point it will make sense to expand the DI ICT field as well. I think having DI SCT sets (like this year's) that are not much harder than a DII ICT set will also help ease the transition for people that lose DII eligibility.The Hub (Gainesville, Florida) wrote:Every year from now on, we're going to have similar discussions pop up after every SCT about the transition from D2 to D1, and will focus on the general attitude of a lot of teams that keep playing D2 and consequently often leave D1 fields shorthanded. A lot of good (D2 eligible) players pour out of high school every year now, and the expanding circuit will mean that it's harder and harder to get a D2 ICT bid. As long as it's out there and they're eligible to get it, a lot of people are always going to chase the white whale of a D2 ICT bid instead of going D1, because the idea of playing in a national tournament is very appealing to them for a variety of reasons. While this is not good for the circuit overall, the attitude will not go away overnight. I don't know what the answer is, or even if it is something that can (or should?) be solved. Forcing players out of D2 with stricter eligibility standards or an increase in the size of the D2 ICT field would generally get more people out of D2, but there's obviously no guarantee that would get them to play D1.
Last I checked, that phrase refers to a specific grad student already in sight, not a hypothetical one we haven't heard about... Who else are we supposed to assume "some Alabama grad student" is other than the Alabama student (At that, one easily mistakeable for a grad student) currently in the discussion? Harrison seemed about as convinced that this was talking about him as I was, when he pointed out that he was an undergrad. This just seems to be backpedaling to cover your rear, though I concede in advance that it is pretty hard to convey the intent of posts through the internet as Jerry pointed out earlier with one of my statements. Also, it does make it a lot more likely in my mind that you were speaking in hypotheticals if you did know he's an undergrad. That said, when you start out the post by twisting an idiom into its negative, usually it makes the rest of the post seem a lot more angry.DumbJaques wrote:Perhaps this phrase implies something different to you than it does for other people, but this in fact was not an ad hominem argument. It was also like, not at all directed "almost entirely" at Harrison, because it is a caricature of a hypothetical Alabama grad student, and to my knowledge Harrison is both tangible and an undergrad.Superb_starling wrote:
On a lighter, much less angry note, the ad hominem arguments to which Harrison refers:There were those 2, which were almost entirely directed at Harrison and served no logical purpose.Chris Ray wrote: some Alabama grad student's stock clue monocle
Yeah, your reference to James Johnson was fine in my mind because it wasn't comparing our arguments to his. It was the later comparisons that were the more iffy ones.DumbJaques wrote: Also the reason I brought up James Johnson was to make fun of James Johnson for being an idiot, something I'd anticipated a member of the Alabama team would actually appreciate.I in fact consider it a very positive thing that (the limited merits of this argument aside), members of James Johnson's former team are just a year later advocating for the SCT-playing grad student's cause.
DumbJaques wrote:It's still like, a really bad argument and everything, and at this point I'm really pleading with you to consider that we don't need to alter DII's difficulty just because one lit question had an easy leadin* or whatever. But nobody here is behaving like James Johnson, and I don't think anyone was seriously suggesting otherwise.
These two seem to contradict each other... You don't see how I'm departing from the central thesis, even though I've said over and over that I don't think the difficulty is anything other than where it should be on average, yet you recognize that I'm talking about specific tossups rather than the whole set. I don't know, maybe you missed a lot of stuff as this developed, but the four bullet points Jerry gave are all accurate in my mind, and I thought I had made that well known.DumbJaques wrote: This image was meant to evoke the comically significant degree to which we all should not give a fuck about whether a grad student playing DII questions finds them too easy, at least as far as changing DII difficulty is concerned. I continue to find the arguments raised by both you and Harrison underwhelming, repetitive, and somewhat frustratingly intractable (contrary to what you've professed, I really don't see where you've departed from the central thesis here). I'm not making any value judgments about people who play DII generally or you guys in particular, and don't appreciate being lumped in as such.