Re: World Quizzing Championships


Steven,

First, let me say good luck with your competition...

However, the reason the first question is bad is that you don't really
know what's being asked for till the end.  This inevitably leads to
"hoses" (i.e., early and incorrect buzzes by people who probably knew
the correct answer but were misled into believing the question was
about something else).

The second question appears to give away the most pertinent
information first, which, to anyone who knew the subject matter, would
make it a buzzer race.

Your lack of knowledge about these basic tenets of question-writing is
perhaps leading Daniel and others to doubt the legitimacy of your
competition.

We all want people to attend our competitions; but first, you have to
show quality, integrity, organization, etc. on a continual basis to
get people interested in coming.

Best regards,
Jeremy R.


--- In quizbowl_at_yahoogroups.com, "quizbelgium" <andessurvivors_at_h...>
wrote:

> Here some questions, as I said not terribly difficult, but not too
> easy I guess (well you can all judge for yourselves):
> 
> In the middle of the 14th century, a Russian sect was established in
> Pskov by deacon Karp. Later the centre of the sect moved to Novgorod.
> The followers, mostly tradespeople and low-ranking clergy, renounced
> hierarchy, priesthood and baptism, for which large fees had to be
> paid. Their sermons were full of social motifs. The Russian Orthodox
> Church dealt with them by having most people of the sect drowned in
> the Volkhov River in 1376. What was the name of that sect?
> 
> 
> Born in Strasbourg in 1906, he attended the universities of Frankfurt
> and Munich, taking a PhD in theoretical physics. In 1935 he accepted a
> position at Cornell University in New York State where he has stayed
> ever since. His main work is concerned with the theory of atomic
> nuclei. His work on nuclear reactions led him to the discovery of the
> reactions that supply the energy in the stars, the carbon-nitrogen
> cycle. He received the Nobel Prize for physics in 1967. What is his
name?
> 
> 
> The answers are (of course): Strigolniki and Hans Bethe.

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