Difference between revisions of "The circuit"

From QBWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Neither of those things are true.)
Line 14: Line 14:
  
 
==Middle School Circuit==
 
==Middle School Circuit==
The middle school quiz bowl circuit largely resembles the high school circuit, as most middle school teams are affiliated with their respective high schools. Due to to the relatively undeveloped nature of middle school quiz bowl, teams usually compete in the high school circuit.
+
The middle school quiz bowl circuit largely resembles the high school circuit.
  
  
 
[[Category:Quizbowl lingo]] [[Category:Quizbowl basics]]
 
[[Category:Quizbowl lingo]] [[Category:Quizbowl basics]]
 
[[Category:Original QBWiki Page]]
 
[[Category:Original QBWiki Page]]

Revision as of 10:10, 17 November 2013

The circuit is the collective name for the group of schools and teams that regularly participate in weekend quizbowl tournaments. By general consensus, "the circuit" does not include schools that only participate in local quizbowl leagues. When referring to the circuit or one of its divisions, it is proper to call it by its name of "the circuit" or "the [insert geographic division here] circuit", rather than just saying "circuit".

Due to obvious geographic restrictions, "the circuit" is divided into several more-or-less autonomous areas, each of which is connected by common national tournaments that teams travel to outside their primary area.

The High School Circuit

High school quizbowl is largely divided into a separate circuit for each state, although there is substantial overlap between circuits on the east coast (thus the creation of a historically-strong "DC area circuit"), and California is largely divided into the Northern California and Southern California circuits. Some circuits (such as Texas and Missouri) have a nominal head, such as the president of the local quizbowl alliance or coaches' association, whereas others have no unifying association and set their schedules more haphazardly. Several prestigious tournaments, such as WUHSAC or the Harvard Fall Tournament, draw many teams from outside the immediate circuit of the region who seek to play a more competitive or diverse field.

The College Circuit

In college, the increased geographic spacing between teams usually means that circuits form in multi-state regions rather than individual state associations. Each circuit usually holds its own mirrors of the tournaments produced each year, though some tournaments (such as older Penn Bowls or VCU Closed) are hosted with an eye to cross-circuit participation.

Regional college circuits have historically existed in the Northeast (Boston area + New England + New York), the mid-Atlantic, the Southeast, the upper Midwest, Missouri/the lower Midwest, Texas, California, the Pacific Northwest, and Canada (Ontario/Quebec). These circuits are not set in stone -- teams caught in between or on the border of two circuits (such as Penn and Princeton, between the Northeast and mid-Atlantic) often alternate between attending sites in one of the nearby circuits or the other, and sometimes teams travel a longer distance from their local area for greater competition.

As of 2013, the most active college circuits are in the Northeast (Boston area to New York), the mid-Atlantic, and the Midwest; for this reason, at least one collegiate national championship is held in those circuits each year to minimize travel distance for a large number of strong teams.

Middle School Circuit

The middle school quiz bowl circuit largely resembles the high school circuit.