College Bowl
- Shade
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College Bowl
Has anyone ever particupated in college bowls, I am about to in 45 minutes. I don't know why I didn't ask for advice/wisdom from the all knowing game show fan community before. I have no idea what to expect, I have a feeling that a guy who watches Millionaire everyday doesn't really have much of a chance without actually practicing quickally answering trivia questions.
Excuse my spelling I'm in a hurry and the spell check isn't working.
Excuse my spelling I'm in a hurry and the spell check isn't working.
- Bob Juch
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Re: College Bowl
I was in the Rose Bowl once.Shade wrote:Has anyone ever particupated in college bowls, I am about to in 45 minutes. I don't know why I didn't ask for advice/wisdom from the all knowing game show fan community before. I have no idea what to expect, I have a feeling that a guy who watches Millionaire everyday doesn't really have much of a chance without actually practicing quickally answering trivia questions.
Excuse my spelling I'm in a hurry and the spell check isn't working.
I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be.
- Douglas Adams (1952 - 2001)
Si fractum non sit, noli id reficere.
Teach a child to be polite and courteous in the home and, when he grows up, he'll never be able to drive in New Jersey.
- Douglas Adams (1952 - 2001)
Si fractum non sit, noli id reficere.
Teach a child to be polite and courteous in the home and, when he grows up, he'll never be able to drive in New Jersey.
- PlacentiaSoccerMom
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My daughter Maddie participates in High School level NAQT, Quiz Bowl. The questions that she encounters are a lot harder than what appears on Teen or Kid Level Jeopardy! (Some are more difficult than regular Adult Jeopardy!)
Because the questions are so specific, categories are assigned to each person on the core team. She is the Lit, Music, Art and Pop Culture person. She is welcome to buzz in on other stuff (she often answers Math and History) but she studies her assigned areas.
I have seen some of the College level NAQT questions, they are hard.
Because the questions are so specific, categories are assigned to each person on the core team. She is the Lit, Music, Art and Pop Culture person. She is welcome to buzz in on other stuff (she often answers Math and History) but she studies her assigned areas.
I have seen some of the College level NAQT questions, they are hard.
- PlacentiaSoccerMom
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Re: College Bowl
If you are serious about participating in College Bowls, you should study the "You Gotta Knows" for NAQT.Shade wrote:Has anyone ever particupated in college bowls, I am about to in 45 minutes. I don't know why I didn't ask for advice/wisdom from the all knowing game show fan community before. I have no idea what to expect, I have a feeling that a guy who watches Millionaire everyday doesn't really have much of a chance without actually practicing quickally answering trivia questions.
Excuse my spelling I'm in a hurry and the spell check isn't working.
http://www.naqt.com/YouGottaKnow/
- Shade
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- PlacentiaSoccerMom
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If you want to get better at it, it's hard work.Shade wrote:Wow, being a trivia expert is hard work.
My daughter thought that she knew a lot and there were high expectations on her due to her Jeopardy! win, but the first time she did NAQT, she got one question during an hour long practice.
She spent the summer studying and is much better now. At the last competition, she had the 4th highest average PPG on her team, which was fabulous considering that she is a Freshman and the rest of her team are Juniors and Seniors. (Her average PPG was in the top 20 out of about 100 players.)
Kids who have been doing NAQT since High School have a huge advantage in NAQT College Tournaments.
- Shade
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- PlacentiaSoccerMom
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- Shade
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- mrkelley23
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I have often found handy lists in the World Almanac.Shade wrote:What material do you suggest? I bought a book called "The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy" I have an almanac, a world map and a dictionary. Any suggestions.
Practice questions seem useless because they wouldn't ask the same question twice.
For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled. -- Richard Feynman
- PlacentiaSoccerMom
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What is your area of expertise?Shade wrote:What material do you suggest? I bought a book called "The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy" I have an almanac, a world map and a dictionary. Any suggestions.
Practice questions seem useless because they wouldn't ask the same question twice.
Start by memorizing the "You Gotta Know Lists." Get subscriptions to Mental Floss, People and Entertainment Weekly. Then figure what your area is and start reference books in that area. If your area is Art, the Annotated Mona Lisa is a good start.
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Read over a few packets of practice questions, then practice writing a packet or two. The best way I know of to get better at answering questions is to write questions. Not only do you get a feel for the way questions are constructed, but you also run across lots of information that doesn't make it into your packet.Shade wrote:What material do you suggest? I bought a book called "The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy" I have an almanac, a world map and a dictionary. Any suggestions.
Practice questions seem useless because they wouldn't ask the same question twice.
Remember the Jeopardy UTOC? The three finalists were a guy who wrote his own high school quiz show, a former writer/editor for NAQT, and a former member of the writing staff for WBSM. Nobody else in the tournament had their writing experience.
We have enough youth. How about a fountain of smart?
- MarleysGh0st
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Hmmm, I just looked this up on Amazon and it sounds interesting!PlacentiaSoccerMom wrote:If your area is Art, the Annotated Mona Lisa is a good start.
Then I checked my library's online catalog. It couldn't find it.
Um, noooooo...Did you mean Annotated moan Lisu?
Maybe I can find it at the next Friends of the Library booksale.
- PlacentiaSoccerMom
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I agree about writing questions. Maddie and her teammates have "homework" to write 5 to 10 questions a week.
Maddie's best question:
Sufferers of this medical condition include British singer Lily Allen, American Idol winner Carrie Underwood, as well as actor Mark Wahlberg. Fictional characters with this condition include James Bond villain Francisco Scaramanga, Friends character Chandler Bing and Krusty the Clown from The Simpsons. Sufferers of this condition, called polythelia, have what distinguishing characteristic?
Maddie's best question:
Sufferers of this medical condition include British singer Lily Allen, American Idol winner Carrie Underwood, as well as actor Mark Wahlberg. Fictional characters with this condition include James Bond villain Francisco Scaramanga, Friends character Chandler Bing and Krusty the Clown from The Simpsons. Sufferers of this condition, called polythelia, have what distinguishing characteristic?
Spoiler
Answer: Three nipples or extra nipples.
- TheConfessor
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"Sufferers?" How much actual suffering is involved? Seems like it might be more of an asset than a liability. I'd heard about Chandler Bing and Krusty, but I didn't know about Lily Allen or Carrie Underwood. Are there photos or other documentation of this?PlacentiaSoccerMom wrote:Maddie's best question:
Sufferers of this medical condition include British singer Lily Allen, American Idol winner Carrie Underwood, as well as actor Mark Wahlberg. Fictional characters with this condition include James Bond villain Francisco Scaramanga, Friends character Chandler Bing and Krusty the Clown from The Simpsons. Sufferers of this condition, called polythelia, have what distinguishing characteristic?
Spoiler
Answer: Three nipples or extra nipples.
- PlacentiaSoccerMom
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Carrie Underwood:
http://www.mackable.com/blog/carrie-und ... rd-nipple/
Lily Allen:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OPNmczUYy8E
http://www.mackable.com/blog/carrie-und ... rd-nipple/
Lily Allen:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OPNmczUYy8E
- TheConfessor
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Wikipedia confirms those and several other examples. No word about any "suffering," however.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supernumerary_nipple
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Supernumerary_nipple
- Shade
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What is the best way to study?
-Read and take notes, then study the notes alone?
-Highlight things that you don't know and the next time you open the book try to learn the highlighted stuff and only breifly look at the unhighlighted?
-Simply keep re-reading over and over again?
-Making Flash Cards and only using the flash cards to study?
-Other?
-Read and take notes, then study the notes alone?
-Highlight things that you don't know and the next time you open the book try to learn the highlighted stuff and only breifly look at the unhighlighted?
-Simply keep re-reading over and over again?
-Making Flash Cards and only using the flash cards to study?
-Other?
- PlacentiaSoccerMom
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I make Maddie about 60 new flash cards a week. Since she is Lit/Music/Art, it's mostly Creator/Creation Questions.Shade wrote:What is the best way to study?
-Read and take notes, then study the notes alone?
-Highlight things that you don't know and the next time you open the book try to learn the highlighted stuff and only breifly look at the unhighlighted?
-Simply keep re-reading over and over again?
-Making Flash Cards and only using the flash cards to study?
-Other?
She goes to practice three times a week and has to take notes of stuff that she didn't know.
She reads constantly and writes questions for the team.
- Shade
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- PlacentiaSoccerMom
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- Shade
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And by 18 she'll be the next Nancy Christy intelligence wise. 20,401 dollars is a start but from what you are telling me I have confidence that she could win 100,000 dollars, at least, on Millionaire if she got on.PlacentiaSoccerMom wrote:She's only 14.Shade wrote:Is she studying to be a Millionaire contestant too? It sounds like with all that training she could do it.
She's already won $20,401 on Jeopardy!
- PlacentiaSoccerMom
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It all depends on the stack.Shade wrote:And by 18 she'll be the next Nancy Christy intelligence wise. 20,401 dollars is a start but from what you are telling me I have confidence that she could win 100,000 dollars, at least, on Millionaire if she got on.PlacentiaSoccerMom wrote:She's only 14.Shade wrote:Is she studying to be a Millionaire contestant too? It sounds like with all that training she could do it.
She's already won $20,401 on Jeopardy!
- MarleysGh0st
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Shade might enjoy reading the transcript of that from the J-Archive:PlacentiaSoccerMom wrote: She's already won $20,401 on Jeopardy!
http://www.j-archive.com/showgame.php?game_id=550
Dang, was that really over two years ago?