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Clarification des fonctions de chaque niveau d'abitre, et modification dans l'attribution des promos Judge

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Clarification des fonctions de chaque niveau d'abitre, et modification dans l'attribution des promos Judge Empty Clarification des fonctions de chaque niveau d'abitre, et modification dans l'attribution des promos Judge

Message  Emmanuelle et Emilien Sam 21 Juil - 22:24

D'Andy Heckt à tous les arbitres certifiés, copié ici avec son autorisation :

Hi everyone,

A couple of announcements to make affecting Pro Tour, Grand Prix, and Conferences, that stem from redefinition of judge levels in the last year. We are now through our first year of transition and in just the last six months we have seen tremendous growth in the Judge Program and level increases.

Overall growth: 14.8%

L1 growth: 13.8% (Australia 27.7%, Russia 43.8%, Southeast USA 36.3%)

L2 growth: 22.1% (SE Asia 41.7%, Italy 64.8% Southwest USA 44.0%)

L3 growth: 8.5% (EU 16.7%, US 5.4%)

Please review the below and if you believe you are not at the appropriate level, check with your Regional Coordinator on how to advance.

Level Ones judge Regular REL events, and are the main envoys to the retail community. L1s participate mainly by working with retailers. Retailers often inquire about local judges, and will often seek their aid and assistance in organizing and running/reporting their tournaments. L1 judges are rewarded and recognized most directly by these partners. Many retail operators employ local judges, while others are local judges themselves.
Level Ones are encouraged to diversify their judging experience, but Grand Prix are unsuitable for this purpose. Instead, Local Judges should attend conferences, travel to judge at another store, or volunteer for organized play events such as conventions.
Veteran L1s who are experienced in running events and are studying the IPG can act as the Head Judge for Grand Prix Trials (GPTs). They are sometimes selected to judge at Grand Prix to assist with public events, but will not be asked to work the main event. The exception to this would be those who are close to Level Two and prepared to be tested that day (because they should have studied the IPG before taking the main event floor).
Those who wish to judge at a Grand Prix should get into contact with their Regional Coordinator to seek an L3+ judge to help them advance to Level Two. L1s that have judged at PTQs and GPs and wish to continue doing are also invited to take the steps needed to advance. If this describes you, then please contact your RC to work towards making this transition.

Level Two’s judge Competitive events, supporting GPs as Floor Judge, Head Judge of events smaller than 100 expected players. L2 want more than to judge at one store. They desire to see tournaments run at a higher REL, and are willing to travel, train and mentor other judges to accomplish this. It’s common for L2 judges to organize events and work with more than one location to improve tournaments for a community. Level 2s require knowledge of Competitive REL policy and processes and with experience judge Qualifier events, support Grand Prix, and WMCQ . They can test L1 judges. For many judges, Level 2 is as high as they’ll desire to progress in the program. L2s who wish to attend a GP should be expecting to be assigned as Floor Judge on main events, Head Judge or Floor Judge on public events. Grand Prix are where L2s can learn to become L3s.

Level Three’s are Regional judges who lead; they lead teams, they lead projects, they know rules, policy, and operation and mentor others on how to do so. They Head Judge events from 100 to 600 expected players (From 100+ expected players an L3 is expected, but when an L3 is not available use an experienced L2 selected in coordination with the RC is acceptable to 150 players). L3s who attended a GP should be expecting to be assigned as Team Leaders on main events, Head Judge of most important public events, or PE manager, and working for their region and program. They should expect to attend Pro Tour on their continent, and only exceptionally outside it.

Level Four’s are the Pro Tour regulars. They administer areas of the Program. They head judge large events with 20-70 other judges such as GPs over 600 expected players. They operate as directors for vast areas of the Program such as testing, policy, recognition, premier event operation, etc…

Level Five’s scope is even larger and broader than Level Four, leading areas that involve several L4s, or managing many projects led by L3s across a wide spectrum of topics. Level Five also Head Judge GPs and also Pro Tours.

Judge Foils: In addition to the level redefinition clearing up a misunderstanding about judge foils is needed. The Judge Program’s purpose is primarily to recruit and develop the quality of judges to improve the player experience of organized play. The intent of judge foils is to recognize judges, and improve and grow judge quality by promoting appropriately experiences for judges to do so. Foils are used to incentivize judges to mentor other judges and improve their skill. Currently judge conferences are the best place for judges to learn from each other and improve their skills. Sharing of competitive operations, rules and knowledge also happens at the Pro Tour (some) and Grand Prix (more) events while judging the floor.

***With that reviewed these are the changes we are making. ***

Pro Tour: Pro Tour is the pinnacle of Magic competitive play. In the new model of the Pro Tour (exclusive, without public events), the player expectation for judge skill has increased and to meet that expectation we will be only bringing L3 judges; tested experts on rules and diplomacy. With training happening primarily at Grand Prix and Conferences, the Pro Tour is more about demonstrating the best quality of judging, so there is less training than prior model and therefore less foils.

Grand Prix: Grand Prix are where Judges develop and share ideas and skill on a continental level. These events are led by an L4+ and have several L3s in leadership roles. Grand Prix are where most recent competitive judging skills and knowledge are transferred from judge to judge. If you are a veteran L1, who has judged at several Qualifiers with other judges, or at Grand Prix, and wish to continue doing so, you should seek testing for L2.

Conference: Judge Conferences are remaining an important strategy for the future. We are increasing the support, management, and development of conference and the content in 2012 and 2013 around the world. We will continue the level of judge foils at these events as they are essential to building a stronger community of judges, and improving the quality of judges and to growing the judge program. Dark Confidant will be removed as a conference mainstay after Pro Tour: Return to Ravnica (Seattle, Oct 20th), and used for specific recognitions by Senior Judges. Talk to your Regional Coordinators about conferences. If you have ideas to share and wish to be involved in developing conferences, email Damian Hiller or Gis Hoogendijk.
Judge Foils: For Grand Prix and Conferences after Pro Tour: Return to Ravnica (Seattle, Oct 20th) to promote development and incentivize appropriate levels, judge foils at Grand Prix will be granted with a ‘packet’ (similar to a current conference packet) per level (L1-L3). As an L2 the number of foils received will be nearly consistent with the current packets that exist. Level Ones therefore will receive half of current, and L3s +50% for their increase role in mentoring and developing L2s at these events

To Summarize:

  • Foil purpose clarified for developing judges
  • Pro Tour pinnacle of judging: L3+
  • Grand Prix: Foils by level
  • Grand Prix: Main event L2+
  • Veteran L1 should test for L2
  • Increase support to conference as our primary training strategy
Les arbitres de niveau 1 sont les arbitres locaux arbitrant majoritairement des tournois amicaux dans leur magasin local. Ils ne pourront plus arbitrer sur les Grand Prix, mais uniquement sur les tournois satellites (ou s'il est prévu qu'ils soient testés pour le niveau 2 lors du Grand Prix). Les arbitres de niveau 1 intéressés par l'arbitrage des Grand Prix ou des PTQs doivent faire le nécessaire pour devenir niveau 2. Ils apprennent à devenir niveau 2 lors des Conférences.

Les arbitres de niveau 2 sont les arbitres arbitrant des tournois ocmpétitifs et dans plusieurs magasins locaux. Ils forment désormais les floor judges des Grand Prix, ou les Head Judge des tournois satellites. Ceux qui le désirent apprennent à devenir niveau 3 lors des Grand Prix, la majorité s'arrête au niveau 2.

Les arbitres de niveau 3 sont les experts en règles, procédures et politiques qui s'investissent dans le programme d'arbitrage et dans leur région. Ils forment les chefs d'équipe des Grand Prix, ou les Head Judge des tournois satellites majeurs. Ils arbitreront sur le Pro Tour, mais quasi exclusivement celui de leur continent.

Les arbitres de niveau 4 sont les gestionnaires du programme d'arbitrage. Ils sont les Head Judges des Grand Prix et sont désormais les seuls arbitres régulièrement sur les Pro Tours.

Les arbitres de niveau 5 gèrent des domaines dirigés par plusieurs niveaux 4 ou des projets impliquant un grand nombre de niveaux 3. Ils Head Judge Grand Prix et Pro Tours.

Les cartes promotionnelles foil exclusives aux arbitres sont là pour récompenser les arbitres et les inciter à s'améliorer et à améliorer leurs camarades. Leur distribution est modifiée pour refléter cela :

Moins de foils sur les Pro Tour (il y en avait auparavant deux douzaines), car les Pro Tour ne sont plus le lieu pour s'entraîner, mais pour démontrer un haut niveau de compétence déjà testé.

La pochette des conférence (une demi-douzaine de cartes) reste identique, les conférences sont considérées comme l'événement essentiel pour le partage des connaissances et des bonnes pratiques.

Sur les Grand Prix, une pochette de conférence sera donnée par niveau du 1 au 3, à la place de la pochette d'une douzaine de cartes qu'on avait pour le moment, quel que soit le niveau. -50% pour les arbitres de niveau 1, +50% pour les arbitres de niveau 3+, inchangé pour les arbitres de niveau 2.

Le Judge Confidant arbitre est retiré des pochettes à partir du Pro Tour Seattle / Return to Ravnica, et utilisé par les coordinateurs régionaux pour récompenser de manière exceptionnelle.
Emmanuelle et Emilien
Emmanuelle et Emilien
Judge

Nombre de messages : 7395
Date d'inscription : 22/04/2009

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