NAQT rules and policy changes for 2023–2024

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NAQT rules and policy changes for 2023–2024

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NAQT has made a number of changes to its rules and policies for the 2023–2024 season.
naqt.com wrote: Gameplay Rules

We made the following changes to the NAQT Gameplay Rules (highlighted on the page):

We changed the structure and content of Rule F.2 (about the length of games). The biggest effect of this is that high school games now use 10-minute halves rather than 9-minute halves. Also, all college games (including community college games) now use 11-minute halves, except that 11-cycle untimed halves are retained for four-year Sectional Championship Tournaments.

We changed and added several rules (F.9.e, J.7, J.8, J.9, J.11) related to the timing of lodging of protests. Essentially, both factual and procedural protests can now be lodged between a tossup and its bonus or at the conclusion of a tossup-bonus cycle (removing the need to wait for a clock stoppage for factual protests, removing the ability to interrupt a question for procedural protests, and removing the need for moderators to intuit whether a protest is factual or procedural when determining when it can be lodged).

We added Rule F.12 codifying how stuttering during answering shall be handled.

We replaced the former Rules G.12 (conferring on tossups) and K.2 (use of reference materials and communication devices) with a new Rule K.2 with a full definition of conferring (including use of reference materials and communication devices) and specifying the penalties for same.

There are some additional minor changes that are not listed here but are highlighted on the Rules page.

Hosting Policies

We have codified existing practice by adding the following to our hosting policies:

Hosts must not publicly post (or otherwise make widely available) scoresheets, category statistics, “advanced” statistics, or other results beyond what NAQT posts on its website without permission in advance from NAQT. Such data may be shared with coaches and players of teams in attendance provided that those people agree not to distribute them further.

Hosts are no longer permitted to retain an (unprotected) electronic copy of questions from their tournament. They may retain printed copies, and electronic access will (generally) be granted via the Study Library.

Eligibility Rules

We have made the following changes to the various eligibility rules (Middle School, High School, Community College, and Collegiate):

In the Middle School Eligibility Rules and High School Eligibility Rules, we clarified that institutions whose possible status as a school is unclear must request rulings at least 14 days before the first tournament at which they wish to compete.

In the Middle School Eligibility Rules and High School Eligibility Rules, we stated that players must enroll in and regularly attend relevant classes to be eligible. Previously, only enrollment was required, leaving open the possibility of odd situations involving withdrawing/dropping classes but remaining eligible.

In the Middle School Eligibility Rules and High School Eligibility Rules, we stated that a taking a class confers eligibility to play for the school(s) on whose transcript the class appears.

In the Middle School Eligibility Rules and High School Eligibility Rules, we stated that if dispensation is granted for a player to compete for a school they do not attend due to local standards making it untenable for them to compete for the school they actually attend, the player may not play for any school other than the one they were granted eligibility to play for.

In the Middle School Eligibility Rules and High School Eligibility Rules, we determined that if a combination of schools is permitted to compete together (as a “co-op”) in quiz bowl or a similar activity by a multi-discipline state athletic and/or activities association, then that co-op is permitted to compete the same way in NAQT quiz bowl. Coaches of such co-ops and hosts of tournaments at which they compete are very strongly urged to notify NAQT of the details of the situation.

In the Community College Eligibility Rules, we established a new rule that a player who loses their Division II collegiate eligibility also loses their Community College eligibility.

In all eligibility rules, we modified the clause stating that we would notify banned parties of bans to allow for the possibility of not having contact information for banned parties. In these cases, we will notify whomever we deem relevant, such as (but not necessarily limited to) coaches, school administrations, etc.

Correctness Guidelines

We made the following changes to the Correctness Guidelines (highlighted on the page):

Fleshed out guideline C.3 about giving partial or inexact dates, years, centuries, and millennia
Broadened guideline C.4.e about giving creators’ names as possessives with the name of a created work
Adjusted guideline C.12 about abbreviations for amino acids
Clarified how guideline F.5 about foreign-language titles applies to performance-oriented works
Jeff Hoppes
President, Northern California Quiz Bowl Alliance
former HSQB Chief Admin (2012-13)
VP for Communication and history subject editor, NAQT
Editor emeritus, ACF

"I wish to make some kind of joke about Jeff's love of birds, but I always fear he'll turn them on me Hitchcock-style." -Fred
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