National Academic Quiz Tournaments, LLC is a question-writing and quiz bowl tournament-organizing company founded by former players in 1996. It is unique among U.S. quiz organizations for supplying questions and hosting championships at the middle school, high school, and college levels. NAQT operates out of Shawnee, Kansas and Minneapolis–Saint Paul.
The company mostly writes practice questions and questions for high school and middle school invitational tournaments, as well as for some . Its involvement in college quiz bowl is mostly restricted to sectional tournaments and the Intercollegiate Championship Tournament.
If any member of the team has an undergraduate degree, the team competes in the Division I competition, and is only eligible for the open championship (i.e. the overall championship).
Exceptions to the eligibility rules have been granted to deal with special circumstances in past years; however, as they are controversial when they occur, they do not occur often.
1997 | Penn | Chicago | |||
1998 | Vanderbilt | Stanford | Swarthmore | Harvard | |
1999 | Michigan | Chicago | Carleton College | Princeton | |
2000 | Boston U | Illinois | Princeton | Harvard | |
2001 | WUSTL | Chicago | Princeton | Pittsburgh | |
2002 | North Carolina | Michigan | Princeton | Yale University | Valencia CC |
2003 | UCLA and Caltech | Chicago | Harvard | California | Valencia CC |
2004 | WUSTL | California | Illinois | UCLA | Valencia CC |
2005 | Tulane | Michigan | VCU | Chicago | Faulkner St CC |
2006 | Maryland | California | Williams College | Stanford | Broward CC |
2007 | Minnesota | Chicago | Carleton | Maryland | Valencia CC |
2008 | WUSTL | Maryland | Harvard | Carleton | Valencia CC |
2009 | Dallas, Texas | Chicago | Minnesota | Chicago | Northeast Alabama CC |
2010 | Chicago, Illinois | Chicago | Minnesota | Brown University | St. Charles CC |
2011 | Chicago, Illinois | Minnesota | VCU | Yale | Chipola College |
2012 | Chicago, Illinois | Virginia | Ohio State | Harvard | Chipola |
2013 | Chicago, Illinois | Yale | Ohio State | Stanford | Chipola |
2014 | Chicago, Illinois | Virginia | Yale | Harvard | Valencia CC |
2015 | Atlanta, Georgia | Virginia | Maryland | Texas | State College-Manatee |
2016 | Chicago, Illinois | Chicago | California | Chicago | Jefferson |
2017 | Chicago, Illinois | Michigan | Oklahoma | California | Chipola |
2018 | Chicago, Illinois | Yale | California | Chicago | Chipola |
2019 | Chicago, Illinois | Yale | Michigan State | Maryland | De Anza |
2020 | Canceled | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
2021 | Online | Columbia | Brown | Vanderbilt | Jefferson |
2022 | Chicago, Illinois | Stanford | Georgia Tech | Yale | Inver Hills CC |
2023 | Chicago, Illinois | Cornell | Brown | Waterloo | Tallahassee CC |
2024 | Chicago, Illinois | Chicago | WUSTL | Waterloo | Chipola |
2025 | Chicago, Illinois | Chicago | Cornell | Harvard | Chipola |
The small school award is given to a public school with a non-selective admissions policy and less than 500 students in grades 10 through 12. Up until and including 2013, the small school champion was decided on a playoff between top finishing teams at the High School National Championship Tournament. Since 2014, a separate national championship tournament has been held for small schools.
1999 | Norman, Oklahoma | Detroit Catholic Central | Walton | Brookwood A | |
2000 | Atlanta, Georgia | State College A | Maggie Walker A | Eleanor Roosevelt | |
2001 | Ann Arbor, Michigan | Detroit Catholic Central | Detroit Country Day | State College A | |
2002 | Austin, Texas | St. John's School | Irmo | Detroit Catholic Central | Kent City |
2003 | Myrtle Beach, South Carolina | Thomas Jefferson A | Dorman A | St. John's | Cutter–Morning Star |
2004 | Houston, Texas | Thomas Jefferson A | Maggie Walker | St. John's A | Cutter–Morning Star |
2005 | Chicago, Illinois | Thomas Jefferson A | Lakeside | State College A | Danville |
2006 | Chicago, Illinois | Richard Montgomery | State College A | Maggie Walker A | Danville |
2007 | Chicago, Illinois | Maggie Walker A | State College A | Thomas Jefferson A | Danville |
2008 | Chicago, Illinois | Thomas Jefferson A | Charter School of Wilmington A | Walt Whitman A | Russell |
2009 | Chicago, Illinois | Charter School of Wilmington A | Dorman A | State College A | Ottawa Hills |
2010 | Chicago, Illinois | Maggie Walker | State College A | LASA A | South Range |
2011 | Atlanta, Georgia | State College A | LASA A | Bellarmine | George Mason |
2012 | Atlanta, Georgia | Bellarmine A | Detroit Catholic Central A | LASA A | Beachwood |
2013 | Atlanta, Georgia | LASA A | Ladue A | Loyola Academy | Macomb |
2014 | Chicago, Illinois | LASA A | St. John's A | LASA B | Hallsville |
2015 | Chicago, Illinois | Arcadia A | LASA A | Detroit Catholic Central A | Harmony Science North Austin |
2016 | Dallas | Hunter A | Thomas Jefferson A | Detroit Catholic Central A | Advanced Math & Science |
2017 | Atlanta, Georgia | Hunter A | Detroit Catholic Central A | Naperville North | Glasgow and St. Mark's |
2018 | Atlanta, Georgia | Plano West A | Hunter A | LASA A | Glasgow and Early College at Guilford |
2019 | Atlanta, Georgia | Beavercreek | University Lab | Chattahoochee A | Glasgow and Miami Valley |
2020 | Canceled | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
2021 | Online | Barrington | University Lab | Detroit Country Day | Westmont and St. Mark's |
2022 | Atlanta, Georgia | Detroit Catholic Central A | Hunter A | East Chapel Hill A | Glasgow and St. Mark's |
2023 | Atlanta, Georgia | Barrington A | Buffalo Grove | Detroit Country Day A | Fair Grove and Basis Schools |
2024 | Atlanta, Georgia | Barrington A | St. Mark's | Livingston A | Hastings and St. Mark's |
2025 | Atlanta, Georgia | Livingston A | Northview | Wade Hampton | West Point and St. Mark's |
2011 | Chicago | Kealing A | Barrington-Station A | Longfellow |
2012 | Chicago, Illinois | Kealing A | Longfellow A | Westminster A |
2013 | Chicago, Illinois | Barrington-Station A | Kealing A | Mesa Verde |
2014 | Atlanta | Harmony Excellence-Houston | St. Mark's | Trickum |
2015 | Dallas | Kealing A | T. H. Rogers A | River Trail A |
2016 | Atlanta, Georgia | Middlesex A | Longfellow A | Challenger-Ardenwood |
2017 | Dallas, Texas | Aptakisic | Mounds Park | Middlesex A |
2018 | Chicago, Illinois | Pi-oneers | Basis Schools A | Longfellow A |
2019 | Chicago, Illinois | Hunter A | Churchill A | Hopkins |
2020 | Canceled | N/A | N/A | N/A |
2021 | Online | Churchill A | Longfellow A | Burleigh Manor A |
2022 | Chicago, Illinois | Longfellow A | Chenery | Greenhill A |
2023 | Chicago, Illinois | Chenery | River Trail A | Cooper A |
2024 | Chicago, Illinois | River Trail A | Sycamore A | Hopkins A |
2025 | Chicago, Illinois | Smith A | Coppell West | Meyzeek A |
In 2006, competitors in the High School National Championship Tournament were given the opportunity to audition for the Jeopardy! Teen Tournament and the Jeopardy! College Championship. Ben Schenkel of Moravian Academy (Allentown, Pennsylvania) qualified for the Teen Tournament at this tryout, and finished as the tournament's first runner-up. Meryl Federman of Livingston High School (Livingston, New Jersey) qualified for the second edition of the teen tournament, called the Jeopardy! Teen Tournament Summer Games, and won.
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