I am currently a senior in high school, and I plan on attending Johns Hopkins University in the fall. In all honesty, I would consider myself a decent high school quiz bowl player, but I was wondering how can I make the transition from being a ~70pp high school player to being a respectable college player.
When it comes to studying, I put in a lot of time, and I do a lot of packet reading, notecarding, and sparknoting . However, I find the latter two to be really tedious, and I've really gotten into the habit of simply reading things that come up (books, poems, short stories, histories, etc). This isnt extremely efficient, but I find it fulfilling.
Anyways, I would really appreciate any advice on how to become a decent college quiz bowl player.
How to transition from high school to college quiz bowl
How to transition from high school to college quiz bowl
Demere
St. Charles Prep '14
Johns Hopkins '18
St. Charles Prep '14
Johns Hopkins '18
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Re: How to transition from high school to college quiz bowl
Personally, a whole year of playing college questions this last year has really helped me improve and get a grasp on the expanded canon. I guess when it comes to studying you do whatever helps you learn best, but there's simply more you have to learn in college quizbowl. Easier tournaments like ACF Fall or MFT are also good ways to get an idea of what to expect in college quizbowl without getting thrown into the lions' den of a tougher regular tourney.
EDIT: Also, this may be more relevant/get more noticed in Collegiate Discussion, if a moderator wants to make a judgement on that.
EDIT: Also, this may be more relevant/get more noticed in Collegiate Discussion, if a moderator wants to make a judgement on that.
Dylan Minarik
Hamburger University 'XX
Northwestern '17
Belvidere North High School '13
Member Emeritus, PACE
JRPG Champion, BACK TO BACK Robot Slayer
Hamburger University 'XX
Northwestern '17
Belvidere North High School '13
Member Emeritus, PACE
JRPG Champion, BACK TO BACK Robot Slayer
Re: How to transition from high school to college quiz bowl
As Dylan said, if you read a bunch of regular difficulty college packets, you'll probably get a sense of some of the things that come up in College quizbowl but are absent at the high school level. Since the cannon is so much larger, you may want to focus on one area of interest to focus your studies.Goole by-election, 1971 wrote:Personally, a whole year of playing college questions this last year has really helped me improve and get a grasp on the expanded canon.
As someone who was in your shoes last year, I understand that it can be intimidating. My advice is to just jump in. Even if they seem hard, try to play a bunch of tournaments and learn things that come up.
If you find it fulfilling to read works that come up in quizbowl as a form of studying, then by all means continue. Generally speaking actually reading works provides deep knowledge which can be important at the collegiate level.zelsc2014 wrote:I've really gotten into the habit of simply reading things that come up (books, poems, short stories, histories, etc). This isnt extremely efficient, but I find it fulfilling.
Graham R.
Maryland
Maryland
Re: How to transition from high school to college quiz bowl
Thanks guys. I appreciate the advise.
Demere
St. Charles Prep '14
Johns Hopkins '18
St. Charles Prep '14
Johns Hopkins '18
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Re: How to transition from high school to college quiz bowl
Which I guess brings up the question of why are you quiz bowling anyways, right? Is winning matches really a means to an end and the reason you put in all the time and money? If so, and I guess there might be people who are, then that's a terrible strategy. But if you're looking to hang out with quiz bowl people, get smarter, and enjoy yourself, then reading 100 Years of Solitude or Catch 22 is actually a lot of fun and a great thing to do.a bird wrote:If you find it fulfilling to read works that come up in quizbowl as a form of studying, then by all means continue. Generally speaking actually reading works provides deep knowledge which can be important at the collegiate level.zelsc2014 wrote:I've really gotten into the habit of simply reading things that come up (books, poems, short stories, histories, etc). This isnt extremely efficient, but I find it fulfilling.
I'd like to echo the sentiments above about reading packets. Particularly packets of tournaments you plan on playing that year. (Previous editions of, not Watkinsing it obviously). What I've done personally is carved out a niche of things that I'm really good at and my teammates aren't, read those packets, and then found the relevant answer lines and plugged them into http://quizbowldb.com/search . I suppose that if you wanted to make flashcards then on leadins and recurring clues, that would be helpful too. I don't know how that would work with a large distribution and a large canon, but a few years of Bible study and that method have kept me from losing a tossup on anything Protestant in about 2 years.
Of course, I really like your idea of reading the source material. Even if you only get 30 PPG instead of 35, you're getting more out of this than the guy scouring quizbowldb with a deck of 1,000 flashcards.
Bradley Kirksey
Mayor of quiz bowl at the University of Central Florida (2010-2015)
The club at Reformed Theology Seminary Orlando (2017 - 2021)
Mayor of quiz bowl at the University of Central Florida (2010-2015)
The club at Reformed Theology Seminary Orlando (2017 - 2021)