Regional Tournament: Saturday, Feb. 24 at Pocono Mountain West High School

Thank you to each and every coach, judge, parent, and volunteer who made our tournament a huge success this year!




Competition Sites

Problem 1: Vehicle Drive-In Movie – Main Gym  
Problem 2: Technical AI Tech-No-Art – Main Gym  
Problem 3: Classics Opening Night Antics – Band Room  
Problem 4: Structure Deep Space Structure – Auxiliary Gym
Structure weigh-in – Room C003 – 8 to 11 AM
Problem 5: Dramatic Rocking World Detour – Auditorium
Primary Problem: The Night Life – Room 122

Spontaneous for all Div I, II, III teams – upstairs in the A-wing
Spontaneous for Primary teams – Room 122


Schedule of Events

7 AM – Building opens for teams/coaches (please no earlier)
7 AM – Cafeteria opens
7 AM to 12 noon – Registration
8:30 AM to 4:30 PM – Merchandise open
8 AM to 3:30 PM – Long-term performances and Spontaneous competitions
4 PM – Pre-Awards Dance party
4 PM – Alumni meeting in Aux Gym for Juniors/Seniors  
5 PM – Awards Ceremony in Main Gym
6:15 PM – Advancers’ meeting in Auditorium


The Parents’ Role at Competition

We parents are the drivers, the carriers, the huggers, the cheerers, the last-minute hardware store runners, the door holders, the floor sitters, and the mighty prop protectors. Our role at competitions is complicated. We must be supportive without getting in the way. Until our children’s spontaneous and long-term are over, we don’t own our children; their coaches own them.

Please… DO:

  • Remember, the coach is the adult directly responsible for the team and the only adult who can approach judges and officials. Any concerns you have should be discussed privately with the coach.
  • Remember, if you observed an apparent penalty, the judges probably did too. Their scoring will reflect that. Officials do not embarrass students by announcing penalties.
  • Encourage team members to not blame teammates, coaches, judges, or other teams if things go wrong. Make sure you don’t attach blame either. All good teams go through major disasters on the way to becoming champions.
  • Encourage team members to have a contingency plan if something does not work. Help them relax so they can do their best.
  • Remind any non-team member who appears to be giving outside assistance that Odyssey officials are always on duty.
  • Exhibit good sportsmanship. Applaud for all teams when appropriate.
  • Encourage your team to respect our host competition site by treating the facility and staff respectfully. 
  • Try to sit with your delegation at the awards ceremony. 
  • Remind your team to have a good time. Remember, what is important in Odyssey of the Mind is the process, not the result. All teams at the competition are already winners.

Please… DON’T: 

  • Flash signs such as “We’re # 1” or chant in front of other teams. Doing so marks your school as poor sports and doesn’t help make friends. 
  • Allow children to scream or be rowdy. Sound travels, and such rowdiness creates a reputation of having wild or unruly students. 
  • Cost your team an outside assistance penalty. Don’t say ANYTIIING. Don’t do anything for the team members. This is their production. Resist the urge to apply makeup, style hair, help put on costumes, or assemble props or equipment. You may only help move things in the hallways and from the competition site once the team is finished.
  • Go too close to where the children are making last-minute repairs, and don’t try to make conversation. Like any top competitors, their concentration is focused on the job to be done. Try to stay around the periphery of the team’s work area. That way, they can find you if there is something within your realm to provide.
  • Talk to the judges. That is the coach’s job.
  • Go near the spontaneous rooms. 
  • Ask questions about spontaneous. Discussing spontaneous prior to the end of competition can disqualify a team. It is tempting to ask how the children feel they did, but you must avoid the topic entirely. Help them maintain the code of honor surrounding spontaneous competition. 
  • Alter seating boundaries at performance areas or the awards ceremony.