US Academic Bee and Bowl

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
US Academic Bee and Bowl
US Academic Bee and Bowl Logo.png
GenreAcademic quiz competition
FrequencyAnnual
Location(s)various
Inaugurated2016
Websitewww.usacademicbowl.com

The US Academic Bee and Bowl (USABB) are all-subject, buzzer-based quiz competitions for elementary and middle school students.[1] The US Academic Bee is for individuals, while the US Academic Bowl—similar to high school quiz bowl—is intended for teams, though individuals can opt to compete as a team of one. USABB was founded in the 2015–2016 season by David and Nolwenn Madden and is overseen by (IAC). These competitions are closely associated with other IAC tournaments at the middle and elementary level, particularly the National Science Bee and National Humanities Bee.[2]

US Academic Bee[]

Format and Rules[]

The US Academic Bee has four divisions: 8th Grade, 7th Grade, 6th Grade, and Elementary. For 8th and 7th grade competitors, there are 30 questions per round; for 6th graders and below, there are 25 questions per round. Each question in the bee is pyramidal, meaning the question begins with obscure facts and ends with more common knowledge. A student leaves the round once they reach 6 points; additional bonus points are added to their final score depending on when they exit the round.

For any question, there can be up to three answer attempts. If a student is the third person to interrupt the reader with an incorrect answer, they lose a point. The first two incorrect interrupts and any response after the moderator has finished reading have no penalty. With the exception of the question number, these rules are nearly identical to those of other IAC tournaments.[3]

Students who finish in the top 50% of competitors at Regionals are eligible for the National Championships.[4]

Question Distribution[]

The distribution of the 30 questions per round is as follows:[5]

Category Number of Questions
Literature 6
History 6
Science 6
Math 2
Fine Arts 3
Religion & Mythology 3
Social Studies 4

US Academic Bee National Champions[6][]

Middle School Champions[]

Year Champion Division School State
2016 William Wang Middle School Longfellow Middle School  Virginia
2017 Shiva Oswal Middle School Team Pi-oneers  California
2018 Robert Muniz Middle School Midtown Classical Homeschool  Florida
2019 Aadit Juneja 8th Grade Aptakisic Junior High School  Illinois
2019 Rohan Ganeshan 7th Grade Quest Academy  Illinois
2019 Arin Parsa[7] 6th Grade Challenger Almaden  California
2020 Anurag Sodhi 8th Grade Burleigh Manor Middle School  Maryland
2020 Rohan Ramachandran 7th Grade University School of Nashville  Tennessee
2020 Neil Kathuria 6th Grade Monroe Township Middle School  New Jersey

Elementary School Champions[]

Year Champion School State
2016 Shiva Oswal Team Pi-oneers  California
2017 Anurag Sodhi Centennial Lane Elementary School  Maryland
2018 Rohan Ganeshan Homeschool  Illinois
2019 Shounak Bhindwale Henry P. Mohr Elementary School  California
2020 Bhaskar Moorthy Buchanan Elementary School  Louisiana

US Academic Bowl[]

Format and Rules[]

The US Academic Bowl has two divisions: Middle School and Elementary School. Middle school division teams are permitted to have students in 6th grade and younger compete, but elementary school division teams must consist entirely of players in 6th grade and below.[8]

In a round of the Bowl, two teams of up to 4 players compete head-to-head. Each half of the match consists of 8 tossups, each with 3 bonus questions. Each correct response earns a team 10 points. However, an early enough buzz on a tossup—before the so-called power mark (*)—will earn a team 20 points. No points are deducted for incorrect responses. If a team correctly answers a tossup, that team receives the opportunity to answer the bonuses. Any bonuses they miss are read to the opposing team, who can earn "bounceback" points for correct responses.

Separating the halves is a sixty-second round with three available categories: Literature, History & Geography, and Science. The trailing team is allowed to choose a category first and receives, as per the name of the round, 60 seconds to answer up to 6 questions. Any questions the team gets incorrect are then given to the other team.

Teammates are not allowed to confer on tossup questions but can do so on bonuses and during the 60-second round. Five preliminary rounds of the Bowl are played before determining the teams that advance to the playoffs.[9]

Teams who finish in the top half of participants; score at least a 0.500 winning percentage; or win at least one playoff game at any Regional Tournament are eligible for the National Championships.

Question Distribution[]

The distribution of the 16 tossups, 16 bonus questions, and 3 sixty-second rounds is as follows:[10]

Category Number of Tossups Number of Bonuses Number of 60-Second Rounds
Literature 3 3 1
History 3 3 1
Science 3 3 1
Math 1 1 0
Fine Arts 2 2 0
Religion & Mythology 2 2 0
Social Studies 2 2 0

US Academic Bowl National Champions[11][]

Middle School Division[]

Year Team State
2016 Middlesex Middle School  Connecticut
2017 Team Pi-oneers[12]  California
2018 Team Pi-oneers  California
2019 Burleigh Manor Middle School A  Maryland

Elementary School Division[]

Year Team State
2016 Team Pi-oneers  California
2017 Centennial Lane Elementary School  Maryland
2018 Centennial Lane Elementary School A  Maryland
2019 Challenger Almaden[13]  California

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "US Academic Bee & Bowl". Institute of Competition Sciences.
  2. ^ "NHBB Launches New Competitions for Middle and Elementary School Students! Announcing the US Academic Bee and Bowl, National Science Bee & National Humanities Bee!". National History Bee & Bowl.
  3. ^ "US Academic Bee Rules Sheet" (PDF). US Academic Bee & Bowl.
  4. ^ "Qualification". US Academic Bee & Bowl.
  5. ^ "US Academic Bee Category Distribution" (PDF). US Academic Bee & Bowl.
  6. ^ "Past National Champions". US Academic Bee & Bowl.
  7. ^ "Young Mensans in the News: Arin Parsa". San Francisco Regional Mensa.
  8. ^ "Tournaments". Burleigh Manor It's Academic.
  9. ^ "US Academic Bowl Rules" (PDF). US Academic Bee & Bowl.
  10. ^ "US Academic Bowl Category Distribution" (PDF). US Academic Bee & Bowl.
  11. ^ "Past National Champions". US Academic Bee & Bowl.
  12. ^ "Whizzing to Top Honors". India Abroad.
  13. ^ "Middle Schooler Arin Parsa Wins 3 Regional Academic Competitions in San Francisco". India West.
Retrieved from ""