Lower North Island Regional Spelling Bee Champion Crowned
22 November 2011
Lower North Island Regional Spelling Bee Champion Crowned
Eva Tinga from South Wellington Intermediate School won the 2011/2012 NZ Vegemite Spelling Bee Lower North Island competition last night.
She will be studying hard now for the Spelling Bee final in Wellington, where she will be up against other regional champs vying for the title of 2012 New Zealand Vegemite Spelling Bee Champion.
Eva correctly spelt the word ‘cellulose’ in the final round against Uma Sreedhar from Queen Margaret College. Uma took out second place after misspelling ‘attrition’. Cameron Clark from St Mark’s Church School, took third place after stumbling on “oblique.” Fourth place getter was Daniel Wrench from Discovery School, who tripped on ‘fallacy’.
All four have won places at the Wellington-based New Zealand Vegemite Spelling Bee Final, held on March 3rd 2012.
Whoever wins the 2012 final will be crowned New Zealand’s Vegemite Spelling Bee Champion and wins a trip to the US, representing New Zealand at the spelling Olympics - the Scripps National Spelling Bee in Maryland.
This will be the eighth time New Zealand has been represented at the US final, which started in 1925, and is America’s biggest and longest-running academic competition. The competition attracts more than eleven million competitors hopeful of winning a place in the championship final.
New Zealand’s best spellers are taken from a pool of Year 8 students from across the country.
Event manager Janet Lucas says the Spelling Bee is nerve-wracking and exciting for competitors and audience alike.
“The Spelling Bee never fails to surprise me. It is a fantastic opportunity for the contestants to enhance their language skills, learn new meanings of words, set study goals and have fun.”
The New Zealand Vegemite Spelling Bee, sponsored by Kraft’s Vegemite, is administered by a charitable trust. Its purpose is to help students improve their spelling, increase their vocabularies, learn concepts and develop correct English usage.
For more information visit www.spellingbee.co.nz.
Spelling Bee Fun Facts
• The Scripps National Spelling Bee was
first broadcast on network television in 1946.
• The
most frequent word on the Scripps National Spelling Bee word
lists has been the French,
"connoisseur".
• Participation in the bee is up 74
percent since the mid 1980s when spell-check usage became
widespread.
• Jody-Anne Maxwell of Jamaica, in 1998,
was the first contestant from outside the United States to
win.
• The official dictionary for the Scripps National
Spelling Bee is the Webster's Third New International
Dictionary that contains more than 472,000 word entries,
counting its
addenda.
ENDS