World Scholar's Cup

The World's Scholar Cup (abbreviated WSC) is an international team academic program with more than 15,000 students participating from over 65 countries every year.[1] The program was founded by DemiDec, in particular by Daniel Berdichevsky, in 2006.[2] First taking place in South Korea in 2007 at the Hankuk Academy of Foreign Studies,[3] the World Scholar's Cup aims to teach students with interesting, not-taught-in-schools lesson, and finding common ground between people of different statuses.

World Scholar's Cup
Daniel Berdichevsky shows off an alpaca mascot at the 2011 Jakarta Round
Type:International Educational Program
Founded:2006
Founder:Daniel Berdichevsky
Headquarters:Los Angeles, California
Managing Director:Jeremy Chumley
Lead Programmer:Tom Brazee
Director of Curriculum:Josephine Richstad
Website:http://scholarscup.org
The official tournament logo.

Tournament format

A team for the World Scholar's Cup is generally composed of three students from the same or different schools, however teams of two or mixed-school teams are permitted too.[4] Teams may participate in any regional round. If teams are unable to attend a regional round, but would still like to participate in the Global Round, they may qualify for a wildcard.

To qualify for the annual Global Round, teams must do one of the following:

  • Exceed a point threshold at a Regional Round (usually 20,000)
  • Earn a wildcard at a Regional Round (through strong point performance)
  • Apply for an exceptional wildcard (granted only in narrow circumstances)
  • Finished in the Top 25 in the Tournament of Champions in the previous year

To qualify to the Tournament of Champions (ToC) at Yale University, New Haven, teams must:

  • Exceed a point threshold at a Global Round (which is usually around 22,000 points but may vary)
  • All members have qualified at a Global Round
  • Two members in a team must have been teammates at the Global Round they qualified from

The tournament is divided into junior and senior divisions, and participation in a division depends on the ages of the students of a team. Participants[lower-alpha 1] who are 14 years of age or older are classified as a senior.[lower-alpha 2] In the 2017 Hanoi Global Round, a new Skittles Division, was formed, for kids aged 8-12. In regional rounds, both divisions participate separately but simultaneously, while global rounds have the events of each division staggered, where the junior division competing in an event a day before the seniors' event. Closing ceremonies are held separately as well.

Events

Each Regional Round consists of four main events: the Scholar's Challenge, Collaborative Writing, The Team Debate, and the Scholar's Bowl.[4] In addition to these four main events, non-competitive activities take place in select tournaments. These activities are both social and academic.

Team Events

Source:[5]

The Scholar's Challenge

The Scholar's Challenge is a 120-question multiple choice exam given to each individual competitor to complete within 60 minutes. Prizes are awarded to top participants in each subject and to both top-scoring overall teams and individuals.

A feature of the Scholar's Challenge implemented in 2015 allows participants to select multiple answers per question. Though each question has only one correct answer, choosing multiple answers allows the participant to earn points inversely proportional to the number of answers chosen. For example, if a participant chose one single answer, and if it was correct, they would score a point; if they chose two answers and one was correct, they would score 1/2 a point; if they chose three and one was correct, they would score 1/3 of a point, and so forth. If time was running out, a participant can shade in all five answers and automatically win 1/5 of a point.

Collaborative Writing

This part is based on arguments, with students picking one of six different prompts. Each participant on a team must pick a different prompt. Participants pick one side of a topic and write for, against, or about it critically, providing evidence to support their claims using any resources available to them, with the exception of social media and communicating with people other than their teammates.

At the beginning of the event, students have 30 minutes to work with their teammates to discuss and research their arguments. Following the collaboration period, students have 45 minutes to write their essay. There is no word minimum or maximum, and students are expected to cite sources. Following the writing period, students then have 15 minutes to collaborate again with their teammates to edit one another's work, but they may not finish a teammate's essay.

Team Debate

All teams have assigned rooms and arguments. In the room, teams will have 15 minutes to confer within the room before the debate begins. Teams may use World Scholar's Cup materials[lower-alpha 3] or any outside resources to prepare.

Each debater will stand in front of the room for the length of his/her speech. Speakers may use notes, but should not read their speeches in their entirety. Students may speak for up to four minutes, however there is no penalty for speaking up to four minutes. The judge will signal time left using knocks, with two knocks meaning the speaker must stop speaking. Between speakers, teams will have 60 seconds to prepare before the next speaker is called.

Before the end of the debate, the competing teams are required to give positive and constructive feedback to the opposing team for roughly 90 seconds, before the judge(s) announce a winning team. The winning team will then proceed to a designated room and the non-winning team to a different designated room, where each will face another team with the same number of wins and non-wins.

One cultural aspect of the debate is the 'lollipop'. In order to promote positivity and self-improvement, the World Scholar's Cup had replaced the term 'losing' with 'lollipopping' since 2015. This change was also reflected in the debate schedules that each team receives.

The Scholar's Bowl

The clicker used for the World Scholar's Cup's Scholar's Bowl.

The Scholar's Bowl is a quiz bowl usually held in a theater. Team members work together to answer multiple choice questions that are displayed on a large screen.

In order to answer the questions, each team of students is given a clicker that connects to a scoring computer on stage. Students then choose their answer by pressing their choice letter on the clicker. Students are given 15 seconds to submit their answer. The questions gets harder each time and worth more points than the previous one. There are sometimes rapid fire questions which have to be answered in 5 seconds, worth even more points.

The Scholar's Bowl implements many types of questions, many tend to include references to pop culture, and often include WSC in-jokes. This is often the last educational event of the competition before the awards ceremony.

Community Events

Source:[6]

The Scholar's Scavenge

The Scholar's Scavenge is an annual scavenger hunt at the Global Round and the ToC, and first took place in 2009 in Singapore.

Students are teamed up randomly and given tasks. At least one person in the team has a camera, and the tasks are completed by taking photos and videos. The tasks may relate to the curriculum, teamwork, organizer, or just silly. Each task is worth a certain number of points depending upon the difficulty. At the end of the scavenge, the leader collects the photos and score them. These scores do not count toward the scores in the competition as a whole, but are only used for this event. Teams with the highest scores can be called for an award in an award ceremony.

The Debate Showcase

External video
Global Round Senior Debate Showcase at The Hague on YouTube (1 hour 7 minutes 46 seconds).

Debate Showcase is an additional event, with the round's top 8 junior and senior debaters take part in this event. At Regional Rounds there is only one Debate Showcase with both juniors and seniors taking part. Regardless, 8 students debate in each Showcase.

The format mirrors the debate's format, but the students instead debate on stage in front of the rest of the participants.[4] When all six speakers have gone, the host of the Showcase invites volunteers from the audience and debaters from the showcase to step forward and share their general thoughts on the topic that was debated.

Additionally, top-scoring round debate participants are the judging panel for the Showcase. When it ends, the panel announce the winners.

The Scholar's Ball

The Scholar's Ball was first added to the tournament in 2011 at the Global Round in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The idea spawned from a conversation about the competition where one party misheard "Scholar's Bowl" as "Scholar's Ball".

The Scholar's Ball encourages mingling, dancing, and the chance to "look sharp". Students are required to come in formal wear. Some students refer to it as a "pseudo-prom" or "nerd-prom". It was introduced to allow students mingle with students from different countries.

The Scholar's Show

Two students perform in The Scholar's Show.

The first Scholar's Show occurred in 2010 at the regional round held in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. It originated from several students playing "We Will Rock You" playing during an intermission. When the song was over, Berdichevsky invited any student wanting to showcase their talent to come forward.

Student performances range from vocal and instrumental performances to beat boxing, dancing, drinking hot sauce and magic tricks. The Scholar's Show is held at all two-day rounds, and at each Global Round and the Tournament of Champions.

Flag March

The Flag March happens at the end of every Global Round and ToC before the Awards Ceremony. In the Flag March, there is one representative (flag bearer) from every country participating. The flag bearers carry the flag of their country and march to the stage,[7]

followed by a staff giving a farewell speech.

The World Scholar's Camp

In 2012, the World Scholar's Camp was created, and took place in Singapore in December 2012. It included seminars and outings to various locations in Singapore.

Camps take place at various schools and cities through the year.[8]

Awards Ceremony

The Awards Ceremony, also known as the Closing Ceremony, takes place just before the end of a round. Traditionally, staff members stand on stage and announce the winners for the entire round. Winners either get a gold medal, silver medal, a pineapple (another form of trophy), or a trophy. The winner of the round gets the tallest trophy, and gets to interact with the props on the stage. Participants who don't get any medal and trophy gets a gold medal named the Da Vinci Award. Weeks later, a certificate will be shipped to all participants.[4]

Very Emotional Farewell To The Year's Theme

Began in 2018 ToC, with scholars together saying emotive byes to the Havana theme and destroying the set of it, the Very Emotional Farewell To The Year's Theme is an event where scholars and staffs ultimately destroy the year's theme in a (hopefully) non-violent way.[lower-alpha 4] The event happens at every ToC at the New Haven Green.

Curriculum

A Collaborative Writing prompt sheet in the regional Medan Round in 2019; students can choose one from the six subjects.

The World Scholar's Cup curriculum has six subjects. The theme changes annually.[9] Students are often given questions that require critical thinking skills as well as their basic knowledge to come to a conclusion rather than focusing on memorization. For instance, instead of asking on which date an experiment was performed, the question would ask, "Which artist would be most likely to oppose this experiment?"

The subjects are:[10]

Until 2009, mathematics, economics,[9] and trigonometry was included in the curriculum. However, in 2010 it was eliminated in order to better address the goals of the competition stating that it is inflexible and difficult to debate. In 2008, the World Scholar's Cup added a 'film' category to its visual arts section, and in 2010 added a "music" category to its art section.

Until 2013, the World Scholar's Cup released curriculum guides each year—one for each subject. The guides were available free-of-charge on its official website. Starting in 2013, topic outlines and theme-relevant material was made freely available to students through their website. The World Scholar's Cup recommends connecting each section of the outline to the given theme and how they connect or impact society.[11]

Until 2014, there was a Current Affairs section, which was replaced by Social Studies. To address its absence, Current Affairs would from thereon out be integrated across all six subjects instead.

Champions

Source:[12]

Seniors

Year Round Location Champion School Country
2012 Global Bangkok ? Hwa Chong Institution  Singapore
ToC Yale Glenys Poon National Junior College  Singapore
2013 Global Dubai Herbert Chang Kaohsiung American School  Taiwan
ToC Yale Medha Goyal Chinese International School  Hong Kong
2014 Global Singapore Terran Kroft Kaohsiung American School  Taiwan
ToC Yale Nora Jandhyala GEMS Wellington International School  UAE
2015 Global Kuala Lumpur Chauncey Lo International School of Beijing  China
Mini Global Ireland Yuval Beker Ahad Ha'am High School  Israel
ToC Yale Chauncey Lo International School of Beijing  China
2016 Global Bangkok Dylan Kroft Kaohsiung American School  Taiwan
Mini Global Prague Vishal Sriram American International School Chennai  India
ToC Yale Pavithra Chempakanalloor Henry Wise Wood Senior High School  Canada
2017 Global Hanoi Nicol Yong St Joseph's Institution International Singapore  Singapore
Global Athens Zhuoyan Li Keishin High School  Japan
Global Cape Town Dana Chiueh International Bilingual School at Hsinchu Science Park  Taiwan
ToC Yale Tyus Sheriff Senri-Osaka International School  Japan
2018 Global Kuala Lumpur Tyus Sheriff Senri-Osaka International School  Japan
Global Barcelona Emily Deng University of Toronto Schools  Canada
Global Melbourne Alessandra Lim St Joseph's Institution International Singapore  Singapore
Mini Global Durban Heather Sandison Merrifield College  South Africa
ToC Yale Tyus Sheriff Senri-Osaka International School  Japan
2019 Global Beijing Sarah Swea Han Chiang High School  Malaysia
Mini Global Nur-Sultan Anushka Chakraborty Indian High School Dubai  UAE
Global The Hague Shaurya Chandravanshi Al Diyafah High School, Dubai  UAE
Global Sydney Xavier Dickason St. Andrew's College  New Zealand
Not-so-Mini Global Manila Tim Lin International Bilingual School at Hsinchu Science Park  Taiwan
Mini Global Durban Siddhant Tandon Dubai International Academy  UAE
ToC Yale Sarah Swea Han Chiang High School  Malaysia

Juniors

Year Round Location Name School Country
2012 Global Bangkok Kevin Kuo Kaohsiung American School  Taiwan
ToC Yale David Boo Koh Hwa Chong Institution  Singapore
2013 Global Dubai Milo Thursfield Ardingly College  United Kingdom
ToC Yale Chauncey Lo International School of Beijing  China
2014 Global Singapore Yifeng Dong Dulwich College Shanghai  China
ToC Yale Aatmik Gupta Modern School, Barakhamba Road  India
2015 Global Kuala Lumpur Emile Timothy Anand Cambridge International School, Dubai  United Arab Emirates
Mini Global Ireland Owen Yeung Po Leung Kuk Choi Kai Yau School  Hong Kong
ToC Yale Sze Ann Pang Nanyang Girls High School  Singapore
2016 Global Bangkok Alessandra Lim SJI International School  Singapore
Mini Global Prague Alexa Jeanne Wong Loste Immaculate Conception Academy  Philippines
ToC Yale Tyus Sheriff Osaka International School  Japan
2017 Global Hanoi Adam Mihir Libby Sishya School  India
Global Hanoi Amy Mance (Skittles Division) Iona Presentation College  Australia
Global Athens Sarah Luna Nabhani Mentari School Jakarta  Indonesia
Global Cape Town Anika Sharma Pathways World School Aravali  India
ToC Yale Chi Dao Mai Stanford Online High School  Vietnam
2018 Global Kuala Lumpur Anthony Shen Kaohsiung American School  Taiwan
Global Kuala Lumpur Maia Anika Punzalan (Skittles Division) Miriam College  Philippines
Global Barcelona Vishnumaya Deepakchandran GEMS Modern Academy  United Arab Emirates
Global Melbourne Dipika Choudhury Perth Modern School  Australia
Global Melbourne Muhammad Rafi Permadi (Skittles Division) BINUS School Simprug  Indonesia
Mini Global Durban Inga Wait Merrifield College  South Africa
ToC Yale Dipika Choudhury Perth Modern School  Australia
ToC Yale Rafi Rahman Yahdieka (Skittles Division) Global Sevilla Pulo Mas  Indonesia
2019 Global Beijing Kimberly Johnson Usman Singapore School Pantai Indah Kapuk  Indonesia
Global Beijing Justine English (Skittles Division) Nord Anglia International School Dubai  United Arab Emirates
Mini-Global Nur-Sultan Ming Xuan Zhang Almaty International School  Kazakhstan
Global The Hague Anne Ling-Yi Wu Kaohsiung American School  Taiwan
Global The Hague Amy Ren (Skittles Division) Mulgrave School  Canada
Global Sydney Sirimongkul Heng Western International School  Cambodia
Mini-Global Manila Bernice Zarzuela De La Salle Santiago Zobel School  Philippines
Mini-Global Durban Kate Hiewon Ahn American International School of Johannesburg  South Africa
ToC Yale Emma Johnson Kelmscott Senior High School  Australia

Seniors

Year Round Location Champions School Country
2012 Global Bangkok Sara Ng, So Phia Ong, Chun Shin Yau Hwa Chong Institution  Singapore
ToC Yale Dikaios Pang, Louiz Kim-Chan, Glenys Poon National Junior College  Singapore
2013 Global Dubai Terran Kroft, Herbert Chang, Kevin Kuo Kaohsiung American School  Taiwan
ToC Yale Medha Goyal, Jimin Kang, Cuthbert Chow Chinese International School  Hong Kong
2014 Global Singapore Kean Murphy, Jack Tan, Cheng Tat Chua  Singapore
ToC Yale Enrique Chuidian, Jonathan Mak, Nicholas Vallone Chinese International School  Hong Kong
2015 Global Kuala Lumpur Zihan Chen, Julie Wang, David Zhao Tsinghua International School/Phillips Academy Andover  China/ United States
Mini Global Ireland Maayan Asiskovich, Yuval Beker, Maya Michaely Ahad Ha'am High School  Israel
ToC Yale Nicole-Ann Lim, Caitlin Wee, Chan Wen-Shuen Nanyang Girls High School  Singapore
2016 Global Bangkok Ivy Gao, Linda Huang, Ng Zi Ling Nanyang Girls High School  Singapore
Mini Global Prague Vishal Sriram, Nate Malone, Uday Saharia American International School Chennai  India
ToC Yale Kelvin Ho, Clement Ho, Owen Yeung Po Leung Kuk Choi Kai Yau School  Hong Kong
2017 Global Hanoi Eunice Lee, Sze Ann Pang, Teo Yue Qi Nanyang Girls High School  Singapore
Global Athens Hila Ofek, Gull Shakhar, David Janglespied Rehovot School for Gifted and Talented  Israel
Global Cape Town Brandon Lin, Wendy O-charoenrat, Dana Chiueh International School Bangkok / International Bilingual School at Hsinchu Science Park  Thailand /  Taiwan
ToC Yale Natalie Kainz, Jeff Hu, Jenny Hu King George V School  Hong Kong
2018 Global Kuala Lumpur Van An Trinh, Lexi Prichard, Terry Guo Island School/Iona Presentation College/Conestoga High School  Hong Kong/ Australia/ United States
Global Barcelona Jeremy Flics, Matthew Flics, Grace Pang Brooklyn Technical High School/Hwa Chong Institution  United States/ Singapore
Global Melbourne Tara Kripalani, Alessandra Lim, Kyle Lim St Joseph's Institution International Singapore  Singapore
Mini Global Durban Heather Sandison, Britney Schroeder, Banoyola Sicwebu Merrifield College, Brettonwood High School  South Africa
ToC Yale Skye Inada, Minami Matsushima, Tyus Sheriff Senri-Osaka International School  Japan
2019 Global Beijing Itamar Galyam, Shelly Napadensky, Hallel Ben Ari Rehovot School for Gifted and Talented  Israel
Mini Global Nur-Sultan Juveria Hasan, Sakshi Koul, Vanessa Angela D'Souza Indian High School Dubai  United Arab Emirates
Global The Hague Brady Sanders, Colby Sanders, Shaurya Chandravanshi Ridge Point High School, Al Diyafah High School  United States/ United Arab Emirates
Not-so-Mini Global Manila Katelyn E. Chen, Joshua Zhao, Janet Chen Jiang International Bilingual School at Hsinchu Science Park  Taiwan
ToC Yale Sarah Swea, Rhowan Ho, Hoven Ewe Han Chiang High School  Malaysia

Juniors

Year Round Location Champions School Country
2012 Global Bangkok Jasmine Thng, Alicia Lim, Selina Xu Nanyang Girls High School  Singapore
ToC Yale Jun Kai Sebastian Guek, Jun Teck Roystan Ang, David Boo Koh Hwa Chong Institution  Singapore
2013 Global Dubai Angela Lin, Yifeng Dong, Romain Speciel Dulwich College Shanghai  China
ToC Yale Claudia Meng, Tara Parekh, Adele Lim Dulwich College Shanghai  China
2014 Global Singapore Claudia Meng, Adele Lim, Tara Parekh Dulwich College Shanghai  China
ToC Yale Helen Bae, Stella Qiu, Jessie Fan Skyline High School (Washington)/West Windsor-Plainsboro High School South/International School of Beijing  United States/ China
2015 Global Kuala Lumpur Khong Yan Yi, Vivien Tan, Wong Zi Ling Nanyang Girls High School  Singapore
Mini Global Ireland Rotem Steiner, Nimrod Nakdimon, Owen Yeung Ort Kramim High School/Po Leung Kuk Choi Kai Yau School  Israel/ Hong Kong
ToC Yale Ruth Scharff-Hansen, Melissa Adams, Gordon Chi German Swiss International School  Hong Kong
2016 Global Bangkok Chi Dao Mai, Khoi Dang Vinh, Gabrielle Jia-Min Ho Australian International School Vietnam/Vo Truong Toan High School/International School Ho Chi Minh City  Vietnam
Mini Global Prague Claire Quan, Annie Qiu, Kevin Xu, Sandra Chang Shanghai American School, Pudong  China
ToC Yale Kyle Lim, Alessandra Lim, Tara Kripalani St. Joseph's Institution International  Singapore
2017 Global Hanoi Kohana Ah-Teck, Sasha Pond, Luka Murphy Tanglin Trust School  Singapore
Global Hanoi (Skittles) Supasinee Siripun, Willa Blair, Victor Phisitkul Ruamrudee International School  Thailand
Global Athens Noam Rotem, Ofek Linchevsky, Noa Alon Rehovot School for Gifted and Talented  Israel
Global Cape Town Aileen Bachtiar, Kathleen Humato, Fiona Limanto National High Jakarta School  Indonesia
ToC Yale Minh Le Hai, Ghina Hijanah Abdul Ghani, Chi Dao Mai Kells Academy/MRSM Alor Gajah/Stanford Online High School  Canada/ Malaysia/ United States
2018 Global Kuala Lumpur Adam Mihir Libby, Sibhi Aravindan, Tejas Narayan Sishya School/American International School Chennai  India
Global Kuala Lumpur (Skittles) Melissa Steffi de Chavez, Zoie Irasusta, Maia Anika Punzalan Miriam College  Philippines
Global Barcelona Muktha Kaja, Abhay Sharma, Rohit Vivek GEMS Modern Academy  United Arab Emirates
Global Melbourne Health Muller, Xavier Dry, Pearson Chambel Scotch College Perth  Australia
Global Melbourne (Skittles) Giang La Chau, Linh Dinh Tran Phuong, Linh Phan Khanh Hanoi-Amsterdam High School for the Gifted  Vietnam
Mini Global Durban Rehema Onchuru, Nozwelo Sibanda, Aymaan Zahir Al-Nur School  Botswana
ToC Yale Adam Mihir Libby, Sibhi Aravindan, Tejas Narayan Sishya School/American International School Chennai  India
ToC Yale (Skittles) Samantha Claire Arcenas, Marie Anne Eloiza Beriña, Leica Juliene Cecilia Miriam College  Philippines
2019 Global Beijing Khok Jie Ying, Phua Yi Jun, Ariel Tear Nanyang Girls High School  Singapore
Global The Hague Anaya Sheth, Uddant Patodia, Shreya Tandon Hill Spring International School  India
Mini Global Nur-Sultan Kushaal Baviskar, Abdullah Haroon, Stylanios Zuburtikudis Brighton College Abu Dhabi  United Arab Emirates
Global Sydney Jocelyn Mary Koswara, Devina Graciella Kwee, Olivia Tjahjadi Kelapa Gading School  Indonesia
Not-so-Mini Global Manila Rafi Rahman Yahdieka, Cornelia Madeleine Sagita, Mikaila Maulidina Surya Global Sevilla Pulo Mas  Indonesia
ToC Yale Chloris Wong, Ran Zhao, Katherine Yan King George V School  Hong Kong


Coach of The Year

2011 James Unsworth Australian International School Malaysia  Malaysia
2012 Nicholas Mokua Light International School  Kenya
Michael Sheridan International School of Beijing  China
2013 Glenda Clark Winchester School  UAE
Frank Hardee North London Collegiate School Jeju  South Korea
Emily Fitzpatrick Qatar International School  Qatar
Tomohiko Takasaki Delegation of Japan  Japan
2014 Matt Roberge Mentari School Jakarta  Indonesia
2015 Selena Gallagher International School Bangkok  Thailand
Darren Lim Prince of Wales Island International School  Malaysia
Matthew Savage & Marie Beanland Bromsgrove International School  Thailand
Mara Nanaman National High Jakarta  Indonesia
Simeon Sostenes Enriquez-Padre 21st Century Private Academy  UAE
Jason Caesar Jincai High School  China
Agustina Ken Hendrayani Sekolah Ciputra  Indonesia
2016 Gina Williams Bahçeşehir College  Turkey
Yaniv Boxer Hillel School  Israel
Saltanat Rahmanova Aychurok Girls High School  Kyrgyzstan
Mitch Pryor International School Yangon  Myanmar
Jennifer Chung Po Leung Kuk Choi Kai Yau School  Hong Kong
Nate Samuelson Shanghai High School International Division  China
Adrian Walker St. Christopher's School Bahrain  Bahrain
Katarina Lovenjak OŠ Danile Kumar  Slovenia
Craig Bowker BESA Leadership Academy  South Africa
Joyce Mburu Rusinga School Nairobi  Kenya
Dalia Ben Assa Ahad Ha'am  Israel
David Sheppard Tanglin Trust School  Singapore
2017 Louise Ormesher Iona Presentation College  Australia
Jonathan Marsh British School Muscat  Oman
Sumana Chatterjee GEMS Modern Academy  UAE
William Norris UCSI International School Kuala Lumpur  Malaysia
Kristine Oehlers Nanyang Girls' High School  Singapore
Steve Sheriff Senri-Osaka International School  Japan
Jake Sklarew International School of Beijing  China
Seth Roberts International Bilingual School at Hsinchu Science Park  Taiwan
Yaffa Gluska Rashish Junior High  Israel
Carmen Ogweno Brookhouse School  Kenya
Janice Doyle Dominican International School Taipei  Taiwan
Agafe Joy Diaz Creative British School  UAE
Marie Beanland Scotch College Adelaide  Australia
Orit Feder Rehovot School for Gifted and Talented  Israel
Cynthia Samynaden Brettonwood High School  South Africa
Elizabeth Serhan La Salle High School  United States
Charles Soko Rhodes Park School  Zambia
Patience Masaire Peterhouse Boys School  Zimbabwe
Nuhal Nassar English Talents School  Jordan
2018 Eka Devi SDI Al Azhar 35 Surabaya  Indonesia
Tom Wash Ruamrudee International School  Thailand
Ashli Carte GEMS World Academy Singapore  Singapore
Mark Williams French International School of Hong Kong  Hong Kong
Zainab Noor Lahore Grammar School State Life  Pakistan
Peter Flynn Dubai English Speaking College  UAE
Danielle Richmond Concordia International School Shanghai  China
Lydia Sundaramutty HELP International School  Malaysia
Shannon Hancock International School of Amsterdam  Netherlands
Aaron Stamboulieh St. George's School of Montreal  Canada
Ece Kahraman Koç School  Turkey
Craig Sanders Ridge Point High School  USA
CJ Junior Light International School  Kenya
Marlene Gracie Grace Trinity School for Girls  South Africa
Divya Pandanda Pathways School Noida  India
Adam Saligman Almaty International School  Kazakhstan
Eliysha Saputra Singapore National Academy  Indonesia
Sam Sterrett Scotch College  Australia
Felda Mohammed Asari Kolej Yayasan Saad  Malaysia
Petri Mostert Curro Hillcrest  South Africa
2019 Marie Nieto Dwight School  USA
Yasin Motara British School of Bahrain  Bahrain
Diana Richardson Emirates International School Meadows  United Arab Emirates
Gary Cairns St. Joseph's Institution Malaysia  Malaysia
Simon Goddard Weedon Doshisha International Junior and Senior High School  Japan
Tanya Atherton Sacred Heart College  Australia
Vaishali Thukral Heritage School Rohini  India
Thomas Bravo Shenzhen Houde Academy  China
Hellena Maria Global Jaya School  China
Fenty Gultom Sekolah Victory Plus  Indonesia
Dr. Abhilasha Chaube Indian High School Dubai  United Arab Emirates
Sundoss Shad Lahore Grammar School 1A1 Senior  Pakistan
Edgar Salmingo St. John Bosco High School (Bellflower, California)  United States of America
Coach of the Decade Nigel Kaw Pioneer Junior College  Singapore
Matt Roberge Mentari School Jakarta  Indonesia

Alpaca Scholar of the Year

Year Scholar Recipient School Country
2014 Terran Kroft Kaohsiung American School  Taiwan
2015 Chauncey Lo International School of Beijing  China
2016 Dylan Kroft Kaohsiung American School  Taiwan
Aimee Watts American School of Rio de Janeiro  Brazil
2017 Alexa J. W. Loste Immaculate Conception Academy  Philippines
Amelia Marlowe BINUS School Simprug  Indonesia
Thomas Savage International Community School Amman  Jordan
Nimrod Nakdimon ORT Kramim  Israel
Elizabeth Kalamatila Rhodes Park School  Zambia
2018 Sarah Swea Han Chiang High School  Malaysia
Rishika Arora Shalom Hills International School  India
Alessandra Lim St Joseph's Institution International Singapore  Singapore
2019 Noam Rotem Rehovot School for Gifted and Talented  Israel
Julia Than Hlaing British School of Yangon  Myanmar
Janet Chen Jiang International Bilingual School at Hsinchu Science Park  Taiwan

Cria Scholar of the Year

Year Scholar Recipient School Country
2018 Jaymee Chen St. Andrew's College  New Zealand

Alpaca of the Year

Year Recipient
2015 Sara Syed
2016 Tom Brazee
2017 Julie Wang
Isabel "Izzie" Hahn
2018 Dylan Kroft
Kevin "KK" Kuo
Vishal Verma
2019 Jacqueline Khor
Robert Brown

MVP

Year Recipient
2016 Isabel Hahn
2017 Albert Ma
2018 Alisya Reza
Jerry's Head
Julie Wang
2019 Angela Chen
Rachel Chen
Aled Lines

See also

Notes

  1. Called as 'scholars' throughout the event.
  2. Stated in a picture at the official website.
  3. Teams joined were given materials to help them during the program months prior to the program.
  4. 'Non-violent' is a 'pledge' for participants not to be wrathful among participants.

References

  1. "The World Scholar's Cup · Host Schools". www.scholarscup.org. Requires patience. Retrieved June 28, 2020.
  2. "3 Murid Indonesia Harumkan Bangsa di World Scholar's Cup". Republika Online (in Indonesian). January 14, 2018. paragraph 2. Retrieved June 28, 2020.
  3. "The World Scholar's Cup · History". scholarscup.org. Retrieved July 3, 2020.
  4. "The World Scholar's Cup". DemiDec Resources. Archived from the original on July 7, 2009. Retrieved July 3, 2020.
  5. "The World Scholar's Cup · Team Events". www.scholarscup.org. Retrieved January 2, 2018.
  6. "The World Scholar's Cup · Community Events". www.scholarscup.org. Retrieved January 2, 2018.
  7. "Flag Bearer List Sheet1.pdf" (PDF). Dropbox. Retrieved September 6, 2015.
  8. "2012 Viewbook" (pdf). Retrieved March 16, 2013. (Download)
  9. "DemiDec Presents the World Scholar's Cup". DemiDec Resources. Archived from the original on June 6, 2009. Retrieved July 3, 2020.
  10. "Vea Siap Harumkan Indonesia Pada Ajang World Scholars Cup di Amerika Serikat". Warta Kota (in Indonesian). Paragraph 4. Retrieved June 29, 2020.
  11. "Subject Introduction". Retrieved March 16, 2013.
  12. "The World Scholar's Cup · Tournament Results". The World Scholar's Cup. Retrieved June 28, 2020.

World Scholar's Cup official website

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