Then it was on to the contest. Since this was the first one this school had done the attendance wasn't great - only eight tables of eight-person teams. Prior to the beginning of the contest my PAF called me aside and said that most of the questions were drawn from the school's teachers and were part of the curriculum and the material the students were studying for the tests. She asked that I not give my team (which had three students on it) the answers right away - I was to let them try and remember the answers since the questions came from their study materials. There were some questions, however, that were not part of the material and I was free to answer those.
In the end our team won by a large margin - not because I gave the answers but because the kids on our team were really sharp. We did miss some questions (such as, "Other than Lincoln and Washington, what two presidents have birthdays in February?", and, on a sheet with photographs we didn't identify Steve Irwin's daughter). There were others that we missed because the kids were sure of the answer but it wasn't correct, most notably, "Name one of the three smartest breeds of dog." And we had one really glaring gaffe. The question was "What disability did Juliette Gordon-Low, founder of the Girl Scouts USA, suffer from?" The kids said "deafness" but our scribe wrote down "dyslexia".
In the end I felt as if I had been a "ringer" in a rigged contest.
Oh, and the answer to the presidential birthday question: