Reach for the Top
Reach for the Top | |
---|---|
CBUT (1961–1966)CBC (1966–1985) | |
Release | 1961 1985 | –
Release | 2000 2010 | –
Reach for the Top (also known simply as Reach) is a Canadian
History
The televised Reach for the Top series was first shown on
Alex Trebek hosted the Toronto version for several years, and was succeeded by Jan Tennant in 1973.[1] In Vancouver, the show was hosted by Terry Garner (1961–1982). For many years the Edmonton host was Colin MacLean. In Windsor, the show was hosts were Don Daly and Marty Adler. In London, the show was hosted by Mark Lade, with judge Steve Officer. In Montreal, the show was hosted by Bob Cadman and by Marc Coté. Shelagh Rogers, later a host for CBC Radio, was a contestant on the original broadcasts of the show. Bill Guest (Winnipeg) hosted the National Finals on CBC from 1969 to 1985.
The CBC stopped airing Reach for the Top in 1985, but the contest continues to be played under the aegis of Reach for the Top Inc.
In 1985, Reach for the Top Inc., a private company, was established by Sandy Stewart, with agreement from the CBC. Stewart then joined with his wife, Patricia Stewart, in partnership with Robert Jeffrey and Paul Russell of Paulus Productions Inc. to create Schoolreach, an in-school version of Reach for the Top available across Canada by subscription.[2] Schoolreach is organized among the different school boards in Canada, and monthly tournaments are played, culminating in a district final each spring. The winner in each district participates in the provincial finals (which are televised in Ontario), and the provincial winner competes in the national championship.
Reach for the Top Inc. produced a season of programming in Toronto in 1986 and 1987. The Reach for the Top National Finals were revived in 1988. In 1995, Sandy and Pat Stewart retired from Reach For The Top. Reach for the Top and Schoolreach were then taken over by Paulus Productions Inc. under the direction of Paul Russell and Robert Jeffrey.
CBC created a similar program,
For the 1990-91 television season, Hamilton, Ontario's
Since 2014, the national finals are uploaded to their official YouTube channel.
Format
Reach questions include "snappers" that open and close each round of gameplay, which can be answered by any of the four players on either team. There are also "Who am I?" or "What am I?" questions and "shootout" questions, also open to any player. "Relay" questions are directed at only one of the teams, and "assigned" questions are directed to a single player. Questions are typically worth ten points, but can be worth up to forty points. Points are not deducted for a wrong answer. If a player on one team answers incorrectly, the question is then open for only players of the opposite team to answer.
Each game lasts for three rounds, with one-minute breaks in between. As of 2009–2010, each game consists of 86 questions, plus four sudden-death tiebreakers in the case of a tie game after regulation. Contestants may answer a question before the reading of it is completed. A correct but anticipated guess does not earn extra points.
The tournament is divided into three different levels. At the regional level, local high school teams compete against each other to determine who goes on to the provincial level. The winners of the provincial championships then go on to the National Reach for the Top tournament. The winning team is then declared the national champions.
Some districts also have "Intermediate" level competitions, where the questions are written with a lower level of difficulty to provide experience to new, younger players. Intermediate level champions do not move on to national finals.
Types of questions
- Snappers: Snappers begin and end every round, and are called "snapstarts" and "snapouts" respectively, and are of miscellaneous category. Four snappers, worth ten points each, begin the first three rounds, and end the first two. To end the third round and the game, there are usually 10-12 snappers worth ten points each. The tiebreaker questions are also snappers.
- Open Questions: These types of questions are open to both teams. Open questions are found in sets of two, three or four, and all relate to the same topic. Each correct answer is worth 10 points, and there is no penalty for a wrong answer. Audio and visual questions follow the same rules. Under the rules of the 2007 and 2008 National tournaments, incorrect answers given before questions in this category were finished resulted in a five-point penalty (a 'neg 5').
- Team Questions: A Team Question is actually a set of questions, worth a possible total of 40 points. When a team question is announced, both teams have an opportunity to answer the first question, called a "scramble". The team that answers the scramble first will have an opportunity to answer the remaining three questions, whereas the opponent will not. In the event that neither team answers the scramble, the remaining questions are open to both teams. In some leagues, the team question is forfeited completely. This is much like the tossup/bonus format played in quizbowl.
- Who/What/Where/What Word am I? Questions: The purpose of a Who/What/Where/What Word am I? question is to guess a person/place/thing/word. Clues are provided by the reader, and are read, one at a time. Between clues, both teams have an opportunity to guess the person/place/thing. If both teams provide incorrect guesses, the next clue will be read. This continues until the fourth and final clue is read. If neither team can provide a correct answer, the answer will be revealed, and no points will be awarded. What Word am I? questions provide up to four quotes with a missing word common to each. If a team provides the correct answer after being provided with one clue, that team will earn 40 points. Each subsequent clue reduces the question's value by 10 points. Unlike a good multi-clued pyramidal quizbowltossup, the clues in a Who/What/Where/What Word am I? question do not necessarily give one unique answer, and sometimes the 40 point clue can be quite vague, e.g. "I am a European Country that has experienced war".
- Chain Snappers: Chain snappers are similar to snappers, but each question is somehow related to the preceding answer. These are usually found in groups of 6, and can replace a snapper set to end a round.
- Assigned questions: Assigned questions are found in sets of eight—four questions per team. A question is assigned to each person; if the person cannot answer the question correctly, his/her opponent (sitting directly across from him/her) will have an opportunity to answer. Players may not consult with their teammates when they are assigned a question.
- Relay questions: Each team is presented with four questions, one team at a time. The first three questions are worth 10 points each, while the last question is worth 20. If a team provides an incorrect answer at any point in the relay, the remaining questions assigned to that team are forfeited. Consultation is allowed.
- 20-point special: A correct attempt at a 20-point special will earn 20 points. Some 20-point specials require more than one answer while others are a bit more difficult than the regular 10-point questions.
- Shootout questions: Shootouts consist of 12 snappers, and are open to both teams. If a participant provides a correct answer, he/she may not answer any further questions in the shootout. In this way, all four team members must answer a question to complete the shootout. A team will be awarded 40 points if they provide four correct answers before their opponents do. This will end the shootout. If neither team provides four correct responses before the end of the shootout, no points are awarded. Prompting and consultation amongst the players is forbidden. A shootout sometimes replaces a set of snappers to end a round.
- List questions: List questions are open to both teams, and are worth a possible 50 points. The reader will introduce the theme of the question, and ask for five items relating to that theme. For example, if the theme were "Chemical elements", the reader could ask for the first five elements of the periodic table. Teams alternate responses; if one team provides an incorrect response or repeats an answer, then the other team shall have an opportunity to name the remaining items in the list unless they too make a mistake in giving a wrong answer or repeating.
Eligibility
Participants must be "continuously enrolled in a secondary school" to be eligible for participation in Reach for the Top.[3] The age limit restricts participants to those who are 19 or younger at the beginning of the school year. There are no rules about the language of instruction in a school or that a school must be in Canada, but the vast majority of teams come from anglophone schools in provinces with established leagues.
In theory, Quebec colleges, distinct post-secondary institutions, do not meet eligibility requirements. In practice, because the first year of college is mostly equivalent to Grade 12 in other Canadian provinces, these players have been allowed.
Select teams
In 1978,
In 2003, University of Toronto Schools (UTS), based in Toronto, Ontario, became the first school in Reach for the Top history to win back-to-back national titles. In 2012, it also became the first school to have won the competition three times. UTS then defended its title in 2013 successfully for a record fourth time. In 2018, UTS extended its record to five by defeating London Central Secondary School in the final.
In 2016,
Schools that have won the championship twice include
In 1990, the champions from Memorial High School in Sydney Mines, Nova Scotia defeated the National Academic Championship team from Collegiate School of Richmond, Virginia 305–280.[4]
Lorne Jenken High School in Barrhead, Alberta, which won in 1973 and made six other nationals appearances in the 1970s, was considered "the series' most successful competitors" in the 1985 edition of the Canadian Encyclopedia.[5]
St. George's High School in
Criticism
Reach for the Top has been criticized by some due to concerns about question writing quality, expensive registration fees, and tournament structure. For example, in Who am I? questions, arbitrarily easy clues are often given towards the start of a question, leading to a buzzer race. Additionally, clues in Team Questions are occasionally of inconsistent difficulty, providing an advantage to one of the teams.
National champions
Following is a full list of national champions of Reach for the Top since its inception in 1965, as published on their official website.[6]
Notable alumni, hosts, and coaches
- Lucie Edwards, Canadian diplomat
- Bill Guest, TV host
- Stephen Harper, former Prime Minister of Canada
- Tom Harrington, Canadian journalist; member of 1974 national champion team
- Bill Hastings, Chief Justice of Kiribati
- Mark McDowell, Canadian diplomat and first resident Ambassador of Canada to the Union of the Republic of Myanmar.
- Shelagh Rogers, Canadian journalist
- Nicole Stamp, Canadian journalist
- Jan Tennant, TV host
- Alex Trebek, TV host
- Andrew Unger, Canadian author
In popular culture
- The Frantics included a sketch mimicking "Reach For The Top" (as hosted by Jan Tennant) on their CBC Radio program and 1984 debut album, Frantic Times.[7]
- In 1989 CBC Television produced Pray For Me, Paul Henderson about a Reach for the Top team striving to reach the national finals.
- Reach for the Top is mentioned in Miriam Toews's 2004 novel A Complicated Kindness
- In 2018, Newfoundland author Joan Sullivan published Game, an oral history of Gonzaga High School's 1974 national finals win over Archbishop O'Leary Catholic High School.[8]
- In 2022, Reach for the Top was satirized on The Daily Bonnet
- The second episode of season 3 of the CBC comedy Son of a Critch is based on the competition.
See also
- List of academic knowledge competitions
- College Bowl, a former American television quiz show for college students
- Academic games
- MathCounts
- SmartAsk, CBC television show that was spun off from Reach
- Schools' Challenge, the UK schools national quiz.
- Génies en herbe, French-language schools quiz on Radio-Canada
- University Challenge, a university student quiz show in the UK
References
- ^ Tennant, Jan | History of Canadian Broadcasting, retrieved November 15, 2022
- ^ "Lives Lived" by Wallace Immen in The Globe and Mail, August 14, 1998, page A16
- ^ Reach for the Top national rules
- The Richmond Times-Dispatch, June 16, 1990, page 21
- ^ The Canadian Encyclopedia entry on "Reach for the Top" from 1985
- ^ "Reach For The Top | Champions". www.reachforthetop.com. Retrieved January 23, 2017.
- ^ Deep Shag Records - The Frantics, retrieved November 15, 2022
- ^ "Relive Newfoundland's 1974 Reach for the Top trivia triumph in new book | CBC News". Retrieved November 15, 2022.
External links
- Reach for the Top official site
- Reach for the Top official YouTube channel (includes videos of national finals 2014–present)
- Reach for the Top TVOntario Video Clips from 2008 & 2009 seasons
- A rare Reach for the Top clip featuring a young Gord Tanner at YouTube