Seven Southland Students To Compete in National Spelling Bee

Student Spellers Compete In 2018 National Spelling Bee

LOS ANGELES (CNS) - The 92nd Scripps National Spelling Bee begins today near Washington D.C. with five contestants from Los Angeles County and two from Orange County as part of the record field of 565.

The spellers will take a multiple-choice test with 12 spelling words and 14 vocabulary questions today, part of the qualifying process to advance to Thursday's finals. The test is considered the bee's first round.

The spellers will spell words aloud for the first time Tuesday at the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center in National Harbor, Maryland. Spellers correctly spelling their second-round word advance to the third round. The Southern California spellers will compete in the third round Tuesday. The third round will conclude Wednesday.

Spellers spelling their third-round words correctly can advance to the finals, which are limited to a maximum of 50 spellers. Spellers' scores are plotted on a chart beginning at 36. Spellers at each consecutive scoring level are added until no more than 50 spellers have been attained.

Spellers receive one point for each of the 12 items correctly identified in the spelling portion of the test, one point for each of the 12 items correctly identified in the initial vocabulary section, three points for a correct answer to the lone item in the second vocabulary section and three points for a correct answer to the lone item in the third vocabulary section.

The Los Angeles County spellers are:

-- Ayle Guevarra, a seventh-grader at Ernest Lawrence Middle School in Chatsworth;

-- Dina Miranda, an eighth-grader at Stanford Middle School in Long Beach;

-- Chloe Na, a sixth-grader at Tesoro del Valle Elementary School in Valencia;

-- Joseph Vicente, a fifth-grader at Good Shepherd Catholic School in Beverly Hills; and

-- Joshua Villanova, a seventh-grader at Traweek Middle School in West Covina.

The Orange County spellers are:

-- Dean Alkhairy, a seventh-grader at Fairmont Private Schools' North Tustin Campus, and;

-- Nicholas D'Sa, an eighth-grader at St. Cecilia Catholic School in Tustin.

The winner will receive a record $50,000 cash prize, $10,000 more than last year, from Scripps, which owns television stations and newspapers.

The winner also receives $2,500 and a complete reference library from the dictionary publisher Merriam-Webster; reference works and a three-year online membership from Encyclopedia Britannica; plus trips to Hollywood to appear on the ABC late-night program “Jimmy Kimmel Live” and New York City to appear on the syndicated morning talk show “Live with Kelly and Ryan.”

Television coverage begins Tuesday from 6:45 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Pacific Daylight Time on the broadband network ESPN3 and the ESPN App. Wednesday's third round will be shown on ESPN3 and the ESPN App from 5 a.m. to about 1:30 p.m. The announcement of the finalists will be at about 1:45 p.m. and will be televised by ESPN3 and the ESPN App.

Finals coverage will begin at 7 a.m. Thursday on ESPN2 and the ESPN App. The prime-time portion will air from 5:30-7:30 p.m. on ESPN and the ESPN App.

The multiple choice Play Along version of both portions of Thursday's coverage will be shown on ESPN U and the ESPN App.

Viewers get a one-in-four chance to pick the correct spelling of the given word and informational boxes highlighting the word's etymology, definition, clear pronunciation and part of speech, as well as live tweets, the speller's biography and more.

The bee is limited to students in eighth grade or below, with contestants ranging in age from 7 to 15 years old.

The field consists of spellers from all 50 states and the District of Columbia, along with American Samoa, Guam, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands and Department of Defense schools in Europe.

Seven foreign nations are also represented -- the Bahamas, Canada, Germany, Ghana, Jamaica, Japan and South Korea.

The field grew from 291 spellers in 2017 to a then-record 516 last year because of the creation of the RSVBee program, an invitational program designed “to level the playing field for national finals qualification,” Valerie Miller, the bee's communications manager, told City News Service.

The program gives students who live in areas without sponsored regional competitions the opportunity to advance to the national bee along with “spellers in competitive regions, where one speller is declared the winner from thousands of schools,” Miller said.

To qualify for the RSVBee program, students had to win their school spelling bee or be a former national finalist and attend a school enrolled in the Bee program. Parents applied on behalf of their child and paid a $1,500 participation fee to accept an invitation.

The 2018 champion, Karthik Nemmani, from McKinney, Texas, was an RSVBee participant.

Ayle qualified for the national bee by winning the Los Angeles County Scripps Regional Bee, while Nicholas qualified by winning the Orange County Spelling Bee. The other five Southland contestants are RSVBee program participants.

No speller from Los Angeles or Orange counties has won the bee.

Photo: Getty Images


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