Difference between revisions of "Dynasty Academic Competition Questions"

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'''Dynasty Academic Competition Questions''', or '''DACQ''', is a question-writing company founded in 2007 by Rebecca Fischer, Alex Price, [[Chris Ray]], and Sharon Wong.  It faded from existence in 2008 after consistently failing to live up to its obligations. Some of the schools who ordered questions from them for the 2007-08 season were still waiting to receive questions or refunds at the beginning of the 2008-09 season. However, the company did fulfill its obligations by the end of the 2008 calendar year.
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{{Companybox
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|Company Name=Dynasty Academic Competition Questions
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|Image=
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|president=Chris Ray  
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|citystate = Maryland (probably)
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|status = CLOSED
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|}}
  
==Practice Sets==
 
DACQ's primary business was selling high school teams four packets each month of 20/20 [[mACF]] style questions. This made their business model very much like [[Patrick's Press]], but that's where the similarities ended. DACQ wrote good questions, and Patrick's Press behaved professionally.
 
  
==Tournaments==
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'''Dynasty Academic Competition Questions''', or '''DACQ''', was a question-writing company that operated from 2007–2008. It was founded by Rebecca Fischer, Alex Price, [[Chris Ray]], and Sharon Wong. Like [[Patrick's Press]], its business model relied on supplying practice material rather than tournament sets. DACQ produced 45 packets of 20/20 mACF questions, in addition to subject-specific study guides.
DACQ ran the [[Weekend of Quizbowl Goodness]] in April 2008 at [[George Mason]]. The tournament was characterized by a strong field, strong questions that were not written by DACQ, and weak organization. A doubles tournament that had been planned for Saturday evening never took place, and several teams walked out of the tournament at various points.
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DACQ ceased operations in 2008 following recurring, severe delays in production and distribution of the latter half of the monthly packet subscriptions. Subscribers were offered a choice between a prorated refund or receiving the questions late with other discounts. All obligations were met by the end of the 2008 calendar year, though not by the end of the season. The rise during the 2008–2009 season of publicly-available high school packet archives additionally made DACQ's business model largely obsolete.
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==Weekend of Quizbowl==
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In mid-March 2008, DACQ conceived of and ran the first [[Weekend of Quizbowl]] at [[George Mason]]. WoQ was an early example of a nationally-drawing high school event run on collegiate questions; it used the Illinois [[MCMNT]] and [[NAQT]] [[SCT]] Division II sets of that year. The event drew an elite, geographically diverse field, but was plagued by logistical and tournament-directing problems. The first day featured a cumbersome rebracketing system and moderator shortage, which were somewhat alleviated on the second day. However, overall delays, sickness, and incidents of weapon possession (brought on by the ill-advised Ides of March-honoring tournament subtitle "Bring Your Own Dagger", which [[Charles Meigs|some people]] took seriously) persisted.
  
 
[[Category:Question writing companies]]
 
[[Category:Question writing companies]]
 
[[Category:Original QBWiki Page]]
 
[[Category:Original QBWiki Page]]

Revision as of 00:27, 1 August 2017

Dynasty Academic Competition Questions
President or CEO Chris Ray
Location: Maryland (probably)
Status CLOSED


Dynasty Academic Competition Questions, or DACQ, was a question-writing company that operated from 2007–2008. It was founded by Rebecca Fischer, Alex Price, Chris Ray, and Sharon Wong. Like Patrick's Press, its business model relied on supplying practice material rather than tournament sets. DACQ produced 45 packets of 20/20 mACF questions, in addition to subject-specific study guides.

DACQ ceased operations in 2008 following recurring, severe delays in production and distribution of the latter half of the monthly packet subscriptions. Subscribers were offered a choice between a prorated refund or receiving the questions late with other discounts. All obligations were met by the end of the 2008 calendar year, though not by the end of the season. The rise during the 2008–2009 season of publicly-available high school packet archives additionally made DACQ's business model largely obsolete.

Weekend of Quizbowl

In mid-March 2008, DACQ conceived of and ran the first Weekend of Quizbowl at George Mason. WoQ was an early example of a nationally-drawing high school event run on collegiate questions; it used the Illinois MCMNT and NAQT SCT Division II sets of that year. The event drew an elite, geographically diverse field, but was plagued by logistical and tournament-directing problems. The first day featured a cumbersome rebracketing system and moderator shortage, which were somewhat alleviated on the second day. However, overall delays, sickness, and incidents of weapon possession (brought on by the ill-advised Ides of March-honoring tournament subtitle "Bring Your Own Dagger", which some people took seriously) persisted.