Schools

Scotts Valley Students Vie For Title of Best Speller

Four SVMS students participated in the county spelling championship over the weekend, with two coming in sixth and seventh.

The county’s best young spellers put their skills to the test on Saturday afternoon, spelling their hearts out until only the top two were left standing at the annual Santa Cruz County Spelling Championship.

The competition at UC Santa Cruz brought out 109 students from 40 county schools, each coming in first or second in their school spelling competitions, to compete in two divisions­—junior, grades four-six, and senior, grades seven-nine.

Scotts Valley Middle School students Ian Gallagher and Agnes Pelczar competed in the Junior division, and Edward Sims-Johnson and Mikaela Anderson competed in the Senior division. Edward and Mikaela came in sixth and seventh place respectively in the senior division.

Find out what's happening in Scotts Valleywith free, real-time updates from Patch.

The two grade levels were separated into different auditoriums for the competition, which was a written contest, instead of the traditional oral. Students were seated in the auditorium with pencils and paper, given the words and definitions, then 15 seconds to write each word.

Small cheers and whispered yeses could be heard quietly erupting throughout the auditorium as the correct spelling of each word was then put on a screen after the 15-second time limit.

Find out what's happening in Scotts Valleywith free, real-time updates from Patch.

“These are students that are academically inclined, and this is a great opportunity for them to be recognized for that,” said Debbie Puente, educational services coordinator for the Santa Cruz County Office of Education. “Kids in sports have so many opportunities to be in competitions, and this is a great opportunity in that vein for students who excel academically.”

Patricia Hernandez, whose son, Del Mar Elementary fourth-grader George Mendoza, was in the competition, said he became interested in being in the competition after watching one on television last year.

“He really liked what he saw,” Hernandez said. “He was always telling me that he was a good speller and that one day he was going to be in a spelling competition.”

The students had to spell 50-60 words chosen by Spell Masters Mardi Browning of the Santa Cruz Sentinel and Michael McCawley, associated director of admissions at UCSC.

“They are always on the lookout for words,” Puente said. “Not everyday words, but words that are used often and are high level. And it’s not something you can study for. Some students are just gifted spellers and understand word origin.”

For the fourth- through sixth-graders, words such as tortoise, appoint, bilingual, jamboree, and calligraphy were given. The seventh- through ninth-graders tackled words like nonchalant, capricious, chauffeur and kinesiology.

Branciforte Middle School seventh-grader Hallie Brown, who came in 10th place, said that some words were harder than others for her.

“I read a lot and I do well in school,” she said. “But here, they have a lot of words I’ve never heard of. I got a lot of them right though. I’m pretty proud of myself.”

Branciforte eighth-grader Alexis Lugo said that although he wasn’t doing too well for the day, he was having fun.

“It’s cool learning new words that you’ve never heard before, like stymie—that one was hard,” he said.

Boulder Creek Elementary School fourth-grader Lilly Berlin said this was the first time she had entered a spelling competition and did so on the recommendation of her teacher.

“She said I was one of the best spellers, so I decided to enter,” Lilly said. “I was sort of nervous. Some of the words were kind of hard, and some were kind of easy.”

The top two spellers in each division will advance to the regional competition. The winners at regionals will advance to the state championship.

Vrendan Aseremo, a fourth-grader from Aptos' Mar Vista Elementary School, placed first in the junior division. Nora Griffith, a Mission Hill Middle School sixth-grader from Santa Cruz, placed second.

In the senior division, Ocean Grove Charter seventh-grader, Andrew Miller, placed first. Kai Tamkun, a ninth-grader at Santa Cruz's Georgiana Bruce Kirby Prep, placed second.

For a list of the top 10 placers in each division, visit the SCCOE website, santacruz.k12.ca.us/ed_services/spelling_bee.htm


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

More from Scotts Valley