Matt Weiner wrote:Once you sign away control of high school quizbowl to state athletic associations, you sign the activity's death warrant.
The Chrysanthemum and the S-Word wrote:Nutty idea: palace coup to install someone who cares about quizbowl
less nutty idea-contact people who care about quizbowl to suggest dissacociation from school, by playing as non-school representing teams, not personally representing the school, off the school's dime. They can hardly forbid students from pusuing hobbies, after all. Give missiouri players and players in similar situations special dispensation to do this. If this can be coupled with mass deafilliation, then there is ever so slightly more than a snowball's chace in hell of missouri quizbowl being salvaged.
IIRC, teams in illinois do this sometime to curcumvent illinois rules on competition attendance.
aestheteboy wrote:More practical (and perhaps the only practical solution) would be to simply quit playing for the school. Most of the people running good tournaments would probably understand and let those unfortunate people play without representing a school.
If it's not related to the school in anyway, then what right in the world would MSHSAA have telling what people can or cannot do in their free time? I don't see how MSHSAA can stop the team (technically a bunch of friends) from doing whatever the hell they want to on weekends.
The Chrysanthemum and the S-Word wrote:Lee- missouri's problem to me is the competition restrictions. If your (insert crappy local format) lets you do whatever you want in addition to it, then it can possibly coexist with good quizbowl. Of course, if these are starting to develop in alabama, than I urge you and anyone you can get on your side to petioin the state school board to let you form a independent quizbowl regulatory body.
Matt Weiner wrote:I thought the state championship in Alabama was run by the Alabama Scholastic Competition Association. Is that body not independent of the sports league?
The Structure of SoCal Action wrote:then why should MSHSAA be informed if a team goes to a collegiate tournament or an out of state one? Do they secretly know what a team is doing with their funds? are there spies everywhere?
Skepticism and Animal Feed wrote:Why would a rational, self-interested Missouri high school quizbowl coach want to switch to real questions? I think you would need to focus on what's in it for them if you want to convince them, not just "it would be more in line with Matt Weiner's quizbowl aesthetic".
The reality is that if you're not playing good quizbowl, there's no point in playing at all. Good questions and good formats encourage you to LEARN THINGS, which is the point of this activity. Bad questions and formats reduce to nothing more than reflex tests, math contests, and rewards for trying to make psychic connections with the writer. School-sponsored Trivial Pursuit serves absolutely no purpose, and increasing participating in it is no achievement.
Matt Weiner wrote:Coaches should want the activity to be fair and to educate the students because they are teachers and role models in an academic setting who have the responsibility to advocate for fairness and for intellectual growth.
Matt Weiner wrote:*College students who want to aid high school teams at their practices are disallowed from doing so.
*Players are not allowed to participate in collegiate or open tournaments.
*The format used at the MSHSAA state championship series, and thus at events which emulate it, takes 45 minutes to run a game and is full of math calculation.
*The format used to qualify teams for the state championship is dependent on arbitrary district assignments that often preclude the second- or third- best team in the state from qualifying for the tournament.
*Nobody can hold a tournament anywhere on Earth without the MSHSAA claiming jurisdiction over it. To invite any teams from Missouri, one must apply to the MSHSAA for approval of the tournament. The approval process is designed to give the MSHSAA grounds to reject any tournament it feels like, as it is nearly impossible to actually complete the required forms. Even for tournaments held within Missouri, approval is not automatic and is sometimes withheld in order to punish people for criticizing the MSHSAA.
The MSHSAA claims jurisdiction over any tournament in the universe that involves a Missouri high school student. Through their "sanctioning" of independent events, through their power to disqualify football teams from schools who play good quizbowl, and through the lack of any interest on the part of the coaches in changing the system, Missouri has effectively killed high school quizbowl. ...... The entire state is being held hostage by football coaches who insist on regulating every interscholastic activity, and quizbowl coaches who are happy to be controlled in this way because it may allow their team to win a trophy without doing any work.
alexdz wrote:If MSHSAA would loosen their restrictions on participation, eligibility, and that end of business, then those that like the ACF/NAQT/PACE/etc style can play it, and those who prefer a more relaxed, novice, trivia game can play it. You're extending qualities to MSHSAA that I think are somewhat hyperbolic.
Jeremy Gibbs wrote:Does anyone care about the real story behind all this or would you rather just base your opinion on false rumors?
Jeremy Gibbs wrote:I haven't read through all this, but I am not sure if this makes any sense. Where is all this coming from?
Does anyone care about the real story behind all this or would you rather just base your opinion on false rumors?
Is this the Presidential election? Someone is spinning things in enormously incorrect ways. I just hope a cabinent position is open to them in January for their troubles.
Ike wrote:Another idea off the top of my head is to create some type of fund for these students to play sub rosa.
Matt Weiner wrote:*The MSHSAA levies sanctions against schools who attempt to use "ineligible" players in their tournaments, by penalizing the entire interscholastic competition program. This means, for example, that someone who participates in ACF Fall and then tries to play in MSHSAA States can get his school's football team disqualified from competition. The implied threat of a quizbowl player being ostracized or assaulted for harming the high school sports establishment is the appalling basis behind MSHSAA's power over quizbowl.
Based upon the total number of schools participating in the activity, schools shall be divided equally into classes.
jrbarry wrote:GHSA required us to get any tournament in which we were to participate approverd by them at least 30 business days in advance. We (GA coaches) enundated their offices with requests for approval. Heck, I remember asking for approval for tournaments all over the country just to clog their system. BY 1994 they were tired of us and they washed their hands of our activity. Since 1994, we only have to make sure our kids are eligible to aprticipate accoprding to Styate Board of Education guidelines.
Jeremy Gibbs wrote:I haven't read through all this, but I am not sure if this makes any sense. Where is all this coming from?
ScoBo22687 wrote:Since MSHSAA requires the same thing, this would be possible. It would be great to see every single tournament in the country request for MSHSAA sanctioning to see how they would handle it.
Matt Weiner wrote:aestheteboy wrote:More practical (and perhaps the only practical solution) would be to simply quit playing for the school. Most of the people running good tournaments would probably understand and let those unfortunate people play without representing a school.
This would get your tournament disqualified by the MSHSAA and prohibit you from involving any aboveboard Missouri teams. Obviously, no tournament actually located in Missouri could consider this.
Jeremy Gibbs wrote:I will try to read this when I get a chance, but as far as my disappearence is concerned, school started and they blocked this site and moquizbowl.com as well as my yahoo fantasy football site at school ruining my morning routine! Ugh!!!
Matt Weiner wrote: *Teams have a date window outside of which they are not allowed to play, affecting about a third of the normal high school quizbowl season.
Matt Weiner wrote: *College students who want to aid high school teams at their practices are disallowed from doing so.
Matt Weiner wrote:*Players are not allowed to participate in collegiate or open tournaments.
Matt Weiner wrote:*Teams are not permitted to travel more than 250 miles out of state during the season.
Matt Weiner wrote:*The format used at the MSHSAA state championship series, and thus at events which emulate it, takes 45 minutes to run a game and is full of math calculation.
Matt Weiner wrote:*The format used to qualify teams for the state championship is dependent on arbitrary district assignments that often preclude the second- or third- best team in the state from qualifying for the tournament.
Matt Weiner wrote:*The questions for the state championshiop series are written by Questions Galore.
Matt Weiner wrote:*Missouri teams cannot participate in national championship tournaments held during the school year (this means a great deal of them cannot participate in PACE NSC this year, since most Missouri schools are in session until Memorial Day weekend). To participate in a post-graduation tournament, they have to apply for special permission from the MSHSAA, which is not always granted, and often involves waiting until two days before the tournament to find out that participation is sanctioned (this means some teams will not participate in NAQT HSNCT this year because their applications will be denied or will be too much hassle to file at all).
Matt Weiner wrote:*The MSHSAA levies sanctions against schools who attempt to use "ineligible" players in their tournaments, by penalizing the entire interscholastic competition program. This means, for example, that someone who participates in ACF Fall and then tries to play in MSHSAA States can get his school's football team disqualified from competition. The implied threat of a quizbowl player being ostracized or assaulted for harming the high school sports establishment is the appalling basis behind MSHSAA's power over quizbowl.
Matt Weiner wrote:*Nobody can hold a tournament anywhere on Earth without the MSHSAA claiming jurisdiction over it. To invite any teams from Missouri, one must apply to the MSHSAA for approval of the tournament. The approval process is designed to give the MSHSAA grounds to reject any tournament it feels like, as it is nearly impossible to actually complete the required forms. Even for tournaments held within Missouri, approval is not automatic and is sometimes withheld in order to punish people for criticizing the MSHSAA.
Matt Weiner wrote:*The attitude of the vast majority of Missouri coaches is quite poor. This is, I think the most major of the problems. When the coaches in the state are not on the side of good quizbowl, there is no effective voice to create positive change. The coaches on the MSHSAA Academic Competition Advisory Committee and the most influential members of MACA clearly demonstrate contempt and misunderstanding towards good question-writing principles and to the idea of quizbowl as an opportunity for intellectual growth. Questions which do not reward or encourage learning are the norm in Missouri. A militant egalitarianism coupled with an attitude of "anyone who can beat me is cheating" is the ideological framework for all policy decisions. Any player or team who seeks to get better is ruthlessly cut down. Coaches publicly mock players on other teams for events in their personal lives, then turn around and complain about "sportsmanship" when their own terrible ideas about quizbowl are criticized. Players who want to improve their games, learn more, attend more tournaments, and write questions are derided as troublemakers, while perpetually mediocre players who cheerlead for the MSHSAA are praised for their "good attitudes."...Most coaches have no interest in teaching their students anything or in improving their gameplay through legitimate means; instead, they come to quizbowl with an attitude of entitlement and seek to "level the playing field" by making every aspect of the game a complete random draw.
Matt Weiner wrote:Every effort from every perspective has been made to change things in Missouri. WUSTL has been running a tournament with pyramidal ACF-format questions for several years, and no one seems to have caught on to why this is better. People have written letters to coaches and to the people on the MSHSAA and MACA boards, which have been met with stone silence in 99% of cases, and incoherent ranting and namecalling in the other 1%. Jeremy Gibbs, the president of MACA, was on this board, promising to speak up for change. Instead, he went behind the backs of the good quizbowl people he had been talking to, repeatedly claimed that good quizbowl is something that "only the best three teams in the state" want, and participated in such decisions as adopting the participation restrictions and giving the state championship contract to Questions Galore. He then disappeared from this board when his actions were questioned. This is, sad to say, exemplary behavior for a Missouri quizbowl coach, since most of them won't even give the time of day to anyone who questions them in the first place. At least Gibbs had the patience to lie to us!
Matt Weiner wrote:Creating such absurdity in relation to quizbowl is what football coaches do. I don't know if Missouri will ever recover from it...if you are a proponent of good quizbowl at any level--student, coach, or alumnus--then the football-lovers do not have your best interests at heart.
Matt Weiner wrote:Uh, if any other anonymous people want to post passionate defenses of bad quizbowl...
Matt Weiner wrote:...and use anti-intellectual talking points about "elitism"
Matt Weiner wrote:...and about how great it is to be "popular" (DO YOU THINK BLAKE WILL ASK ME TO THE PROM, LIKE OH MY GOSH?!?!)...
Matt Weiner wrote: This thread is for people who do understand and support good quizbowl, to discuss how to go about getting Missouri to adopt it, since most of the methods that have succeeded in other states are blocked by the MSHSAA structure.
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