Let me spell it out for you
Danette Goulet
NEWPORT-MESA -- Tensions were high Wednesday morning as students from
across the district competed for the spelling bee titles.
Each elementary school sent one to two students from the fourth, fifth
and sixth grades to compete in districtwide spelling bees.
“My mom says I’m a natural speller,” said 9-year-old Joseph Ludlow.
Joseph was the fourth-grade spelling bee contender from Adams Elementary
School, but he was tripped up during the second round by the word
“benefactor.”
He had made the first cut of the competition -- a 20-word written
competition -- and was one of 11 fourth-graders to advance to the oral
round.
“I studied every night and my mom quizzed me on some words,” he said.
“And my principal quizzed me, too.”
Colton Dillion from Andersen Elementary School said he studied 10 pages a
night for the last month and a half. Colton made a good run until he
stumbled on the word “denominator.”
“Everyone else got all the easy ones,” Colton said.
While the fourth-graders were sweating it out at Victoria Elementary
School, the fifth-graders were struggling over at Kaiser Elementary
School.
“It was the longest spelling bee we’ve ever had,” said Daryle Palmer,
principal at Kaiser. “Brooke Sharp and Tiffany Liu went for about 25
words -- just the two of them. It was amazing.”
In the end, Tiffany was the victor. But it is only Hong An Nguyen, the
sixth-grade champion from Davis Elementary School, who will move on to
the Orange County competition.
Hong will be spelling against the best sixth-grade spellers of each
district in Orange County on March 2.
WINNERS
Fourth Grade
1st place -- Ben Kane, Kaiser
2nd place -- Andrew Watt, Eastbluff
Fifth Grade
1st place -- Tiffany Liu, Eastbluff
2nd place -- Brooke Sharp, Newport
Sixth Grade
1st place -- Hong An Nguyen, Davis
2nd place -- Sara Salam, Eastbluff
STUMPERS
Here are some of the words from the fourth-grade spelling bee:
denominator
apostrophe capitalism
authentic
desirable
erroneous
certificate
alliance
complexion
tutelage
* In the final round, “residence” was spelled correctly and
“accelerator” was misspelled.
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