(Make-Up) Open Round of NACLO @ CCSU
On Thursday,
February 10, 2011, an Open Round of
the North American Computational Linguistics Olympiad will be held at CCSU.
Please note the
following schedule and directions,
and plan on arriving at CCSU by 9:00am. The Open Round is to be held in The Constitution Room, which is located on the second floor of Memorial Hall.
Please note the following schedule for the event.
9:15-9:30 Sign-In
9:30-9:50 Light Breakfast (provided by CCSU) and Rest Room Break
9:50-10:00 Review of NACLO Rules
10:00-1:00 Problem Set Completion
1:00-2:00 Lunch (Optional; Provided by CCSU)
Plan to arrive at the
university by 9:00 to insure that you are signed-in at 9:15. Come
prepared with pencils (optional) for scratch work, and two pens with black ink. Only answers
submitted in black ink will be considered.
Directions and Parking
From the East:
I-84 West to Exit 39A, Rte 9 South. Exit 29 to Ella Grasso Blvd. Turn right to the university
From the West:
I-84 East to Exit 39A, Rte 9 South. Exit 29 to Ella Grasso Blvd. Turn right to the university.
From the North:
Rte 91 South to I-84 West to Exit 39A, Rte 9 South. Exit 29 to Ella Grasso Blvd. Turn right to the university.
From the South:
I-95 North to I-91
North to Exit 22N, Rte 9 North. Exit 29 to Cedar Street. Straight off
ramp . At second light, left onto Ella Grasso Blvd to university.
From the Southeast:
I-95 South to Rte 9
North. Exit 29 to Cedar Street. Straight off ramp . At second light,
left onto Ella Grasso Blvd to university.
Parking is available at the Student Center garage. Follow signs for NACLO.
Please read the following information regarding the rules during the Open Round of NACLO.
General
The NACLO competition
is for high-school students, which also allows the participation of
middle-school students. It consists of two rounds, called the Open Round
and Invitational Round.
Open Round (February 10, 2011):
The first round is open to all interested middle-school and high-school
students; its purpose is to identify the strong contestants who advance
to the second round. The
judges expect that about one hundred contestants will advance to the
Invitational Round.
Invitational Round (March 10, 2011):
The second round is for the contestants who have advanced from the
first round, and the problems at this competition are harder than the
Open Round problems. The
purpose is to select national winners, who will be eligible to
participate in the International Linguistics Olympiad (ILO).
Problems and solutions
Allowed and disallowed materials
- The contestants should bring their own paper and black
pen, and may optionally bring pencils or other writing instruments for
scratch work. The facilitators will provide additional paper as
necessary.
- The contestants
should write their solutions in black ink, and may use pencils only for
scratch work. They may use blank paper for scratch work; however, they
should copy their final solutions into the spaces
provided in the problem booklet, and they may enclose additional sheets
only if the space in the booklet is insufficient.
- The
contestants may not use any electronic devices except basic
wristwatches. In particular, they may not use calculators, computers,
palm pilots, cell phones, pagers, or wristwatches with built-in
calculators.
Attempts to use electronic devices will normally lead to
disqualification. If a contestant has any medical electronic devices,
required for health reasons, she or he should notify the facilitators
about it before the contest.
- The contestants may not use any written or printed materials, such as books or their own notes produced before the contest.
Conduct during the contest
- The contestants should
follow all instructions of the facilitators; if they have questions
about the rules or conduct during the contest, they should raise their
hand and ask a facilitator.
- The
contestants may not talk with anyone except facilitators, and may not
collaborate with each other. Attempts to communicate with other
contestants will normally lead to disqualification.
- Any
bags should be placed under the seats before the contest, and may not
accessed during the contest. Thus, the contestants should get all
required materials from their bags before the contest.
- If
a contestant has a cell phone, pager, or any other sound-emitting
device, it should be turned off before the contest; note that switching
it to the silent mode is not sufficient.
- The
contestants may take bathroom breaks during the contest; however, they
may not take their bags, any electronic devices, problem booklets, or
their notes with them when temporarily leaving the room. Also,
two contestants may not take a bathroom break at the same time.
- The
contestants may bring snacks into the contest site and eat during the
contest, but they should be considerate of others. In particular, they
should avoid "noisy" foods, such as foil-wrapped chocolates, and
foods with a strong smell. The local facilitators have the authority to override this rule and prohibit snacks at specific sites. Even if the facilitators allow snacks, they have the authority to remove any types of food from the contest site if they
feel that these types of food may distract other contestants.
- If
some contestant arrives late, they may still participate in the
contest; however, they may not ask facilitators to repeat any
instructions or announcements that have been missed due to the late
arrival. Also,
they may not ask for time extension in the end of the contest, which
means that they will have less time than the other contestants.
Questions during the contest
- If a contestant has a
question, she or he should raise a hand, and one of the facilitators
will answer the question. When talking with a facilitator, contestants
should keep their voice low, to make sure that
they do not distract others and do not accidentally provide a hint for
solving any problems.
- If
a contestant needs a clarification for a specific problem, the
facilitator will need to contact the judges via email, which means that
an immediate answer may not be available. Please note that local
facilitators
are unable to provide answers without contacting the judges. If the
judges agree that the problem requires a clarification or correction,
they will normally announce it to all contestants.
- If
the judges feel that an answer is already contained in the booklet, or
that a contestant is asking for a hint on how to solve the problem, they
may refuse to answer the question.
Note to facilitators:
The contest orginizers will provide the e-mail address for
clarification questions. Please do not attempt to answer questions about
problems without contacting the judges. Also,
please monitor your e-mail for possible clarifications and corrections.
Please remember that even a minor comment may sometimes give your local
contestants an advantage over others, and it may also confuse
contestants.
Scoring
- Every problem will be worth a specified number of points; harder problems are generally worth more points.
- The
judges will score each solution based on its correctness, quality, and
clarity, and determine the overall score as the sum of solution scores;
see the NACLO scoring page for
more details. They will try (but do not guarantee) to complete the scoring and announce the results within three weeks after the competition.
- The
judges are solely responsible for scoring the solutions, ruling on
unforeseen situations, and selecting the winners; their decisions are
final.
Special needs
If some contestants
have special needs, they should notify the contest organizers as soon as
possible, and the organizers will try to accommodate them. The
contestants should discuss all their special needs
before the contest.