Difference between revisions of "DART"

From QBWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m
 
(4 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''DART''' (short for '''D'''etroit Country Day '''A'''cademic '''R'''egular '''T'''ournament) is a series of high-school charity [[housewrite]]s produced by the [[Detroit Country Day|Detroit Country Day School]] starting in 2019. All proceeds went toward the Red Cross and Gleaner's Food Bank, a local Detroit-based institution that helped fight hunger during the COVID-19 Pandemic.
+
'''DART''' (short for '''D'''etroit Country Day '''A'''cademic '''R'''egular '''T'''ournament) is a series of high-school charity [[housewrite]]s produced by the [[Detroit Country Day|Detroit Country Day School]] starting in 2019. All proceeds went toward the Red Cross and Gleaner's Food Bank, a local Detroit-based institution that helped fight hunger during the COVID-19 pandemic.
  
 
==DART I==
 
==DART I==
  
The first DART was [[mirror]]ed starting in January 2021. It was head-edited by DCDS alum [[Christopher Gilmer-Hill]], and written by the DCDS team with help from subject editors [[Jon Suh]], [[Sarod Nori]], [[Jakob Myers]], [[John John Groger]] and [[Jason Golfinos]]. The target difficulty was high-school [[regular]], which it was perceived to have somewhat overshot. Compared to other [[mACF]] sets, the [[distribution]] featured more [[geography]], [[current events]] and [[trash]], and less [[religion]] and [[mythology]] – a sort of middle ground between the [[ACF]] and [[NAQT]] distributions.
+
The first DART was [[mirror]]ed starting in January 2021. It was head-edited by DCDS alum [[Christopher Gilmer-Hill]], and written by the DCDS team with help from subject editors [[Jon Suh]], [[Sarod Nori]], [[Jakob Myers]], [[John John Groger]] and [[Jason Golfinos]]. The target difficulty was high school [[regular]], which it was perceived to have somewhat overshot. Compared to other [[mACF]] sets, the [[distribution]] featured more [[geography]], [[current events]] and [[trash]], and less [[religion]] and [[mythology]] – a sort of middle ground between the [[ACF]] and [[NAQT]] distributions.
  
 
==DART II==
 
==DART II==
  
The second iteration of the set was first mirrored in September 2021. It was head-edited by DCDS captain [[Arthur Gayden]] with help from [[Christopher Gilmer-Hill]], and was produced in collaboration with [[Troy (MI)|Troy High School]] as well as a pool of guest writers recruited through an open application process. Subject editors were [[Steven Liu]], [[Eric Yin]], [[Arjun Nageswaran]], [[Zaid Siddiqui]], [[Dylan Bowman]], [[Adam Sun]], [[Sarod Nori]], [[Daniel Ma]], [[Jon Suh]] and [[Jason Golfinos]]. Unlike the previous year's set, DART II was meant to be [[regular-plus]] difficulty. It kept mostly the same distribution as DART I.
+
The second iteration of the set was first mirrored in September 2021. It was head-edited by DCDS captain [[Arthur Gayden]] with help from [[Christopher Gilmer-Hill]], and was produced in collaboration with [[Troy (MI)|Troy High School]] as well as a pool of guest writers recruited through an open application process. Subject editors were [[Steven Liu]], [[June Yin]], [[Arjun Nageswaran]], [[Zaid Siddiqui]], [[Dylan Bowman]], [[Adam Sun]], [[Sarod Nori]], [[Daniel Ma]], [[Jon Suh]] and [[Jason Golfinos]]. Unlike the previous year's set, DART II was targeted at [[regular-plus]] difficulty. It kept largely the same distribution as DART I.
 +
 
 +
==DART III==
 +
 
 +
The third DART was mirrored in the second semester of 2023. [[Arthur Gayden]] head edited, with [[June Yin]], [[Geoffrey Wu]], [[Adam Sun]], [[Neal Joshi]], [[Brad Maclaine]], [[Vedul Palavijjhala]], and [[Vishal Sareddy]] serving as subject editors. The set was targeted to regular+ difficulty. This iteration was notable for [[Eric Mukherjee]] and several members of the [[University School of Nashville|USN]] team stepping in to write and edit a substantial fraction of the tournament (to the tune of 120 questions over the winter holiday) after multiple editors were unable to complete their portions on time.
 +
 
 +
==See also==
 +
*[[DART Mainsite]], the tournament hosted by DCDS
  
 
[[Category:Sets]][[Category:Tournaments]]
 
[[Category:Sets]][[Category:Tournaments]]

Latest revision as of 01:03, 26 October 2023

DART (short for Detroit Country Day Academic Regular Tournament) is a series of high-school charity housewrites produced by the Detroit Country Day School starting in 2019. All proceeds went toward the Red Cross and Gleaner's Food Bank, a local Detroit-based institution that helped fight hunger during the COVID-19 pandemic.

DART I

The first DART was mirrored starting in January 2021. It was head-edited by DCDS alum Christopher Gilmer-Hill, and written by the DCDS team with help from subject editors Jon Suh, Sarod Nori, Jakob Myers, John John Groger and Jason Golfinos. The target difficulty was high school regular, which it was perceived to have somewhat overshot. Compared to other mACF sets, the distribution featured more geography, current events and trash, and less religion and mythology – a sort of middle ground between the ACF and NAQT distributions.

DART II

The second iteration of the set was first mirrored in September 2021. It was head-edited by DCDS captain Arthur Gayden with help from Christopher Gilmer-Hill, and was produced in collaboration with Troy High School as well as a pool of guest writers recruited through an open application process. Subject editors were Steven Liu, June Yin, Arjun Nageswaran, Zaid Siddiqui, Dylan Bowman, Adam Sun, Sarod Nori, Daniel Ma, Jon Suh and Jason Golfinos. Unlike the previous year's set, DART II was targeted at regular-plus difficulty. It kept largely the same distribution as DART I.

DART III

The third DART was mirrored in the second semester of 2023. Arthur Gayden head edited, with June Yin, Geoffrey Wu, Adam Sun, Neal Joshi, Brad Maclaine, Vedul Palavijjhala, and Vishal Sareddy serving as subject editors. The set was targeted to regular+ difficulty. This iteration was notable for Eric Mukherjee and several members of the USN team stepping in to write and edit a substantial fraction of the tournament (to the tune of 120 questions over the winter holiday) after multiple editors were unable to complete their portions on time.

See also