Schools
County Spelling Bee Winner Will Head to D.C.
Christopher Umanzor of Old Mill Middle School South tied with Kate Reed of Severn School for third place.
When Emily Durell first heard her championship word Saturday morning in Round 10 of the Anne Arundel County Spelling Bee she “totally freaked out.”
The freaking out was for good reason. Her word? Execration. It’s a noun meaning the act of cursing or denouncing.
It may sound easy now, especially reading it. But standing in front of a packed room of family members, teachers, administrators and 26 other contestants who had misspelled a word before her, “execration” was not exactly what Emily said she was expecting to hear.
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“I think it was on the list, but I’ve never used it in a sentence,” the 13-year-old from Crofton Middle School said shortly after correctly spelling the word. “It’s totally mind blowing. I never expected to be the winner.”
Cheers erupted in the school board meeting room in the Parham Building along Riva Road when Emily, who finished second at last year’s county bee, took the top title in this 23rd annual event. She has earned a trip to the 2011 Scripps National Spelling Bee in Washington, D.C., on June 1.
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There was a four-way tie for second place, with each speller bowing out in the ninth round. The second-place winners were Courtney Dixon of Annapolis Area Christian School, Carrie Shade of the School of Incarnation, Jessica Schultz of St. Jane Frances School and Hope Lomvardias of St. Martin’s Lutheran School.
Christopher Umanzor of and Kate Reed of Severn School tied for third place.
Joe Thompson, father of speller Annabel who is an eighth grader at The Key School, said he already was proud of all the students in the bee, just for qualifying. Thompson works at Indian Creek School.
“[Annabel] loves reading and it’s clear that all the other kids here do, too,” he said. “This has really been a good celebration of what all these kids are capable of doing and their potential.”
Annabel bowed out in the sixth round with an incorrect spelling of the word taiga.
Looking around the room prior to the start of Round 5 when the field had been narrowed down to 12 spellers, Thompson said he was excited with how the event was organized and how the students supported each other.
“It’s great to see how positive the whole thing has turned out to be,” Thompson said.
And echoing his sentiments, many of the students offered a thumbs up to a smiling speller has they walked successfully back to their seats, or whispered a “good luck” as the next speller walked up to the microphone.
All of the contestants received a prize bag with various gifts, including a $25 check from the 21st Century Education Foundation. Those in the top three spots each will receive a trophy and additional cash prizes. The second-place finishers also won a Merriam Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary and an Amazon.com gift card.
As the champion, Emily also won a Webster’s Third New International Dictionary and a Sameul Louis Sugarman Award certificate and savings bond donated by Jay Sugarman, in honor of his father, a lifelong advocate of education.
For the first time, the bee was broadcast live on AACPS-TV on Channel 96 on Comcast and Broadstripe and Channel 36 on Verizon. The event will be shown again and the schedule can be found on the school system's Web site.
Glen Burnie-area participants included:
- Alexis Coby, Grade 7,
- Kelsey Jackson, Grade 8,
- Tina Lim, Grade 8,
- T’Asia Mann, Grade 7,
- Kevin Shelley, Grade 7,
- Christopher Umanzor, Grade 8, Old Mill Middle School South
- Brittney Leasure, Grade 7,
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