Difference between revisions of "Gentlemen's agreement"

From QBWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Tag: Redirect target changed
Tag: Removed redirect
Line 1: Line 1:
#REDIRECT[[Quizbowl lingo#Gentlemen's agreement]]
+
<onlyinclude>A '''gentleman's agreement''' is a style of "[[eligibility]] rules" used for events such as the [[EFT|Early Fall Tournament]] and [[ACF Fall]]. Instead of uniformly barring people based on their experience or educational progress, individuals are encouraged to personally evaluate whether they are the appropriate audience for a tournament.</onlyinclude>
 +
 
 +
For example, a second-year grad student who is usually a 15 PPG player and is unlikely to massacre the field by themselves may find ACF Fall an appropriate tournament to play, but a junior who is a star player and could dominate the competition may not.
 +
 
 +
The implementation of this policy has been mixed, with some people who clearly are not the target audience of these events playing them anyway. However, it still offers some advantage over the more inflexible rules for participation in other "novice tournaments," which may bar upperclassmen or graduate students who are in fact "novices" at quizbowl.

Revision as of 17:07, 13 June 2021

A gentleman's agreement is a style of "eligibility rules" used for events such as the Early Fall Tournament and ACF Fall. Instead of uniformly barring people based on their experience or educational progress, individuals are encouraged to personally evaluate whether they are the appropriate audience for a tournament.

For example, a second-year grad student who is usually a 15 PPG player and is unlikely to massacre the field by themselves may find ACF Fall an appropriate tournament to play, but a junior who is a star player and could dominate the competition may not.

The implementation of this policy has been mixed, with some people who clearly are not the target audience of these events playing them anyway. However, it still offers some advantage over the more inflexible rules for participation in other "novice tournaments," which may bar upperclassmen or graduate students who are in fact "novices" at quizbowl.