NC’s record-breaking reading bowl win
January 22, 2020
On Saturday, January 18, NC’s Helen Ruffin Reading Bowl team competed in the annual Reading Bowl held at South Cobb High School. NC placed second behind Walton High School, and as a result, will compete in the regional competition on February 8.
Throughout six to seven rounds, seven high school teams tested their knowledge of the 2019-2020 Georgia Peach Book Award Nominees. In each round, moderators asked the teams ten random questions based on details within any of the books they read. Players buzzed in within ten seconds, and if they answered correctly they earned ten points for their team; only five students from each team could compete each round. NC’s team consisted of 7 students who rotated spots throughout the rounds.
In the first round, NC went up against Walton (last year’s first-place winner) and lost 60-40. In round two, NC beat Wheeler 80-20, and after taking a break during a bye round, Kennesaw Mountain lost to the Warriors 50-30. NC won round four against McEachern 70-10. The Warriors beat Campbell 60-40 in round five, and in the final round defeated South Cobb 60-40.
“They did the work and they motivated each other, and I think those are the two keys. They wrote questions, and they wrote them early enough so that they got to start practicing in November,” Renee Brown, English teacher and Reading Bowl team coach said.
Only the teams who placed first and second could move on to the regional competition. After placing third for the past two years, NC’s team will compete at regionals for the first time ever.
“In the ten years that I’ve been doing it we’ve never gone to regionals, and we didn’t have a reading bowl [team] before I started it, so we’ve never been to regionals,” Brown said.
With a team mostly made up of seniors, Brown began contemplating the future of the club and its graduating members.
“As long as I’m giving them back their love of reading, that’s going to take them wherever they want to go for the rest of their lives. I see a lot of my old students on Facebook and they talk about how they’re still reading… I can’t put a price on that. I don’t know how they’re going to grow, but I know that they will continue to grow,” Brown said.