Los Angeles Times

Snafu doesn’t deter champs

Quiz results are tossed because of leaked questions. Granada Hills wins again.

- By Howard Blume howard.blume @latimes.com Twitter: @howardblum­e

Quiz results are tossed, but Granada Hills wins Academic Decathlon again.

A security breach was not enough to derail Granada Hills Charter High School, a perennial favorite, from winning this year’s California Academic Decathlon in Sacramento in results announced Sunday.

The problem ended up invalidati­ng the Super Quiz, which is the highest-profile and only public portion of the annual competitio­n. In the quiz, teams of students submit answers to questions that are tallied in real time before enthusiast­ic onlookers.

After the Super Quiz was completed Saturday, a team coach alerted organizers that competitor­s could have seen the questions in advance, said Cliff Ker, the decathlon coordinato­r for the Los Angeles Unified School District.

The state of Alaska had used the same version of Super Quiz questions several weeks ago — and that event was recorded and posted on YouTube.

“I don’t think any of the kids in the California competitio­n saw the video, but it was out there and it’s been out there for a month,” Ker said. “I agree with the decision” to invalidate the quiz results.

Questions for the Super Quiz are supplied by the United States Academic Decathlon, which does not provide unique versions for every state.

A release from state director Ken Scarberry said that “in the interest of fairness,” Super Quiz results would be excluded. Scarberry made the decision in consultati­on with board members and county coordinato­rs.

The contest was a grueling multiday affair. Individual­s on nine-person teams submitted essays online in advance, then on Friday took written tests related to this year’s topic: World War II. On Saturday, participan­ts took part in interviews and also gave prepared and impromptu speeches.

Segments of the competitio­n relate to the topic through economics, language and literature, mathematic­s, music and social science.

The team from Granada Hills proved unfazed by anything, scoring 55,211 points out of 60,000 possible.

The prevailing Granada Hills students are Melissa Santos, Aishah Mahmud, Kevin Ly, Mark Aguila, Christophe­r Lo, Peter Shin, Sebastian Gonzalez, Sabrina Carlos and Jordan Barretto.

Their coaches are Mathew Arnold, Harsimar Dhanoa, Jonathan Sturtevant and Rachael Phipps.

There also was an L.A. flair to the next several finishers: El Camino Real Charter High (54,017 points), Franklin High (52,677), and Marshall High (52,189). The next-highest finisher was South Pasadena High (51,920).

Granada Hills, the reigning national champion, will represent California and pursue the state’s fifteenth consecutiv­e U.S. title at the nationals, which will take place April 17-23 in Madison, Wis.

All told, 581 students from 67 high school teams took part.

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