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2006 Competition Data
The National High School Computer Competition consists of three main parts; Oral Questioning, Computerized Examination, Programming Component and an optional T-shirt design component.
On the first day there is an oral round robin of questions. In addition there is a computerized examination where each student is given 15 minutes to answer as many questions as they can. Questions for the Oral and Computerized component cover a variety of computer fundamentals and BDPA history.
On the second day, each team is given a Program Specification for a typical business problem. They have 7 hours and one computer to analyze, design, program, and document a solution to the problem. In building their web application, the teams have a choice between the following technologies, Sun Microsystems Java Technology, Microsoft ASP, Open Source Software PHP, or Microsoft .NET. Students use one of these technologies in conjunction with SQL to retrieve data from a database and generate dynamic HTML content for display in a web browser. They are then required to present their solution to a team of judges.
The business problem for 2006 was to create a Donate for Disaster Relief website
Teams also have the option of designing a T-shirt that graphically and creatively captures the essence of the 2006 conference theme “Picturing the future of Information Technology".
Winning Teams
2006 High School Computer Competition
1st place – Chicago
2nd place - Southern Minnesota
3rd place – Washington, DC |
T-Shirt Competition
1st place – Washington, DC
2nd place - Southern Minnesota
3rd place – Rhode Island |
BDPA Teams
| Atlanta |
Austin |
Richmond |
Charlotte |
Washington DC |
| Chicago |
Cincinnati |
Dallas |
Dayton |
Southern Minnesota |
| Hartford |
Chattanooga |
Philadelphia |
Rhode Island |
Central Illinois |
| St. Louis |
Twin Cities |
Detroit |
Los Angeles |
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March 2010
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