Spelling bee

Spelling bee

A spelling bee is a competition where contestants, usually children, are asked to spell English words. The concept is thought to have originated in the United States, and is usually perceived to be a solely English language practice. [ [http://www.rte.ie/tv/theview/archive/20031007.html RTÉ Television - The View ] ] Today, National Spelling Bee competitions for English are held in the United States, Great Britain, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and Indonesia, among others.

Etymology

Although its only modern usage is in "spelling bee", the word "bee" has historically been used to describe a get-together where a specific action is being carried out, like a husking bee, a quilting bee, or an apple bee. Its etymology is unclear but possibly derived from the Old English word "bēn" for prayer. [http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/bee [3,noun] Merriam-Webster: bee] ]

History

The earliest evidence of the phrase "spelling bee" in print dates back to 1825, although the contests had apparently been held before that year.Fact|date=February 2007 A key impetus for the contests was Noah Webster's spelling books. First published in 1786 and known colloquially as "The Blue-backed Speller," Webster's spelling books were an essential part of the curriculum of all elementary school children in the United States for five generations.

The United States National Spelling Bee was started in 1925 by "The Courier-Journal", the newspaper of Louisville, Kentucky. In 1941, the Scripps Howard News Service acquired sponsorship of the program, and the name changed to the Scripps Howard National Spelling Bee (later simply "Scripps National Spelling Bee"). As well as covering the 50 U.S. states, several competitors also come from Canada, the Bahamas, New Zealand and Europe.

In the United States, spelling bees are annually held from local levels up to the level of the Scripps National Spelling Bee which awards a cash prize to the winner. The National Spelling Bee is sponsored by English-language newspapers and educational foundations; it is also broadcast on ESPN. Since 2006, the National Spelling Bee's championship rounds have been broadcast on ABC live. In 2005, contestants came from the Bahamas, Jamaica, Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, American Samoa, Canada, New Zealand, Puerto Rico, and a German military base, as well as the United States. This was the first year that spellers from Canada and New Zealand attended the competition. The final authority for words is the Merriam-Webster unabridged dictionary, the "Webster's Third New International Dictionary". The annual study list is available from Scripps, either online or in print.

The Spelling Bee of Canada started with a local contest in 1987 in Toronto, Ontario. In 1996, contestants were accepted from other provinces. However, it has been overtaken in media coverage by the newer (and newspaper chain-affiliated) CanSpell National Spelling Bee.

The National Senior Spelling Bee started in Cheyenne, Wyoming in 1996. Sponsored by the Wyoming AARP, it is open to contestants 50 and older. Maria Dawson is the only contestant to ever win two back to back titles at The National Spelling Bee.

Word Cup also includes a fundraising campaign for literacy organizations, whose funds are distributed by the Word Cup winners to participating projects.

School spelling bees

Spelling bee students usually start competition in elementary schools or middle schools. For elementary schools, children usually have a class bee to select children for the school bee, and are given a list of words to study. For middle schools, a bee is usually given in one's English class, or is open for anyone. A list of words is also given to middle school students.

Usually, but not always, the student who places first at their school bee goes on to a district or regional bee. At this level, there is no fixed word list to study. The top 10 children at the district bee go on to the regional/state bee. Many schools in the country stop spellers at this point from continuing on to the national bee, mainly because of inexperience. The number of students who do head on to the national bee varies from state to state. If a student succeeds the regional bee, they usually hire tutors to help them prepare. ["SEMMLAA (Southeastern Michigan Middle Level Administrator's Association) regional spelling bee administrator's packet"]

National spelling bee

Serious spelling bee competitors will study root words and etymologies, and often foreign languages from which English draws, in order to spell challenging words correctly. Spellers also study words used in previous bees; there are several preparatory materials published in connection with the Scripps National Spelling Bee. The previous resource was called the "Paideia" word list (from the Greek word meaning education and culture), and has since been discontinued.

In the year 2006-2007, the Scripps National Spelling Bee started publishing a new book of words called "Spell it!" Devoted spelling bee participants also use other reference books, which feature strategies, methods and lists to help the contestant further develop their spelling skills. Tutoring materials to aid spelling skills are also becoming available on the web.

For the first several decades, the Scripps' annual study booklet was named "Words of the Champions", and it offered 3,000 words in a list separated into beginning, intermediate, and advanced groupings. In the early 80s Hexco Academic started offering "Valerie's Spelling Bee Supplement" [ [http://www.hexco.com/mm5/merchant.mvc?Screen=PROD&Store_Code=Hexco&Product_Code=vs Valerie's Spelling Bee Supplement : Hexco, Inc ] ] to spellers to give them a phonetic pronunciation and definition for each word. This product grew out of Valerie's own experience in working with the Scripps' word list, looking up the words, and committing them to her then TRS/80 computer. She was the youngster that prompted the company to offer "her notes" for sale to other spellers. From there the small company developed computer software, products for conducting bees, and ultimately a line of advanced study products. Every National Spelling Bee Champion since 2000 has used Hexco Academic [http://www.hexco.com/mm5/merchant.mvc?Screen=CTGY&Store_Code=Hexco&Category_Code=NSB] study materials in preparation for the higher rungs of competitions, particularly "Nat's Notes" [http://www.hexco.com/mm5/merchant.mvc?Screen=PROD&Store_Code=Hexco&Product_Code=nnn&Category_Code=NSBa] and "Spelling Rules Book". [http://www.hexco.com/mm5/merchant.mvc?Screen=PROD&Store_Code=Hexco&Product_Code=spbk&Category_Code=NSBa]

As Hexco began offering the only study materials available for preparation for the National Spelling Bee other than the 2,600 page "Webster's Third New International," spellers became more competitive, and the National Bee started using more and more difficult words to conduct their bees. In the mid-90s the annual study list changed to be "Paideia" which ultimately contained 4,100+ words, then again changed in 2006 to be the shorter list, entitled "Spell It!" Hexco has continued to provide annual products for studying the annual Scripps study list, and they continue to add advanced products to prepare spellers for the esoteric words spelled at the National Spelling Bee.

In popular culture

In television

*A British television show called "Spelling Bee", featuring adult contestants and broadcast by the BBC on 31 May 1938, is generally held to have been the world's first television game show. [ [http://www.ukgameshows.com/page/index.php?title=Spelling_Bee_%281%29 Spelling Bee (1) - UKGameshows] ]
*A game on "The Price Is Right" in the United States, called "Spelling Bee", requires the contestant to spell CAR by selecting cards from a board, in order to win a car. The contestant also has the opportunity to take up to $5,000 instead of the car.
*A game show on the former Black Family Channel cable network, "Thousand Dollar Bee" engaged children in a spelling bee-like competition. [ [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0445908/ "Thousand Dollar Bee" (2004)] ] [ [http://youtube.com/watch?v=KfNdwlywXuM Youtube - 1000 Dollar Bee] ]
*The 2004 game show "The Great American Celebrity Spelling Bee" featured four teams of four celebrities playing for charity. The show was hosted by John O'Hurley, and help for the celebrities was provided by Scripps National Spelling Bee participant Samir Patel.
*Five episodes of the ESPN show "Cheap Seats" presented and satirized the taped television coverage of the 1994, 1995, 1996, and 1997 Scripps National Spelling Bees.
*The NBC game show "The Singing Bee" is like a spelling bee but instead of spelling words, contestants have to identify lyrics to popular songs.
*"Spelling Bee," a "Saturday Night Live" comedy sketch in which Will Forte's character delivers a 75-letter misspelling of the word "business" that includes 12 consecutive q's

In fictional television

*The 1878 Bret Harte poem "The Spelling Bee at Angels" describes a spelling contest held at a California gold mining camp.
*A spelling bee features as pioneer family entertainment in "Little Town on the Prairie" by Laura Ingalls Wilder, in which Pa 'spells down' the whole town.

Fictional television episodes

*An episode of "Friends" titled "TOW The Late Thanksgiving" Rachel lies to Ross, saying that she took part in a spelling bee
*"I'm Spelling as Fast as I Can," an episode of the animated television series "The Simpsons"
*An episode of "The Proud Family" titled "Spelling Bee"
*An episode of "Roseanne" titled "Aliens"
*An episode of "Psych" titled "Spellingg Bee"
*An episode of Hey Arnold! titled "Spelling Bee"
*An episode of My Name is Earl titled "The Professor"
*An episode of "South Park" titled "Hooked on Monkey Phonics"
*An episode of "According to Jim" titled "Spelling Bee"
*An episode of "Full House" titled "Spellbound"
*An episode of "Ned's Declassified School Survival Guide titled "Sick Days & Spelling Bees"
*An episode of "Mr. Belvedere" titled "The Spelling Bee"
*An episode of "The Suite Life of Zack and Cody" titled "Neither a Borrower nor a Speller Bee"
*An episode of "Drawn Together" titled "Spelling Applebee's"
*An episode of the CBC series "The Red Green Show" titled "The Spelling Bee"
*An episode of "Frasier" titled "War of the Words"

In film

*the 1994 film "Billy Madison"
*the 2001 novel "Bee Season" and its 2005 film adaptation
*the 2006 film "Akeelah and the Bee"
*the 1969 animated film "A Boy Named Charlie Brown"
*The 1986 ABC TV-movie "The Girl Who Spelled Freedom", about a Cambodian immigrant girl who competes in spelling bees. [ [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0091115/ The Girl Who Spelled Freedom (1986) (TV)] ]
*The 2002 Academy Award-nominated documentary, "Spellbound", featured eight competitors in the 1999 Scripps National Spelling Bee.
*A scene in the movie "Mean Girls" shows a girl spelling the word 'xylocarp.'

In theatre

*"Eleemosynary", a 1998 play by Lee Blessing, uses the spelling bee as a key story element.
*"The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee", a 2005 play by James Lapine.

In novel

*A character in "The Phantom Tollbooth", a novel by Norton Juster, is named the Spelling Bee.

ee also

*Dictation (exercise)

References

External links

* [http://www.spellingbee.com/ Official website of the Scripps National Spelling Bee]
* [http://www.spellingbee.com/terminology.shtml Information on the origins of "bee"]
* [http://www.visualthesaurus.com/bee/ Visual Thesaurus Spelling Bee - Free online spelling bee that automatically adapts to your spelling ability]
* [http://www.dpssemantics.com/ Denver Public Schools Students and Teachers Spelling Bee Information]
* [http://www.espindle.org/win_spelling_bee.html Online tutoring website maintained by non-profit organization; includes free online forum for Spelling Bee enthusiasts]
* [http://www.WordCupCafe.org Online Word Cup - global spelling bee for all ages, free tryouts]
* [http://www.spellbee.org/ SpellBEE: A web-based two-player spelling bee, designed to motivate appropriate challenges]
* [http://www.franklin.com/promo/spellingbee/ Franklin Spelling Bee]
* [http://www.spellingbeeofcanada.ca Spelling Bee of Canada]
* [http://www.seniorspellingbee.com/ National Senior Spelling Bee]
* [http://www.spellingsociety.org/news/media/spellingbee.php Spelling Bee Protesters]
* [http://www.canspell.com CanSpell Spelling Bee]


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Spelling bee — (англ. spell произносить по буквам + bee (истор.) собрание[1]) конкурс (как правило детский) произношения слов по буквам. Как полагают, правила конкурса были придуманы в США. Национальные конкурсы проводятся во многих странах, например в США …   Википедия

  • Spelling bee — Spelling Spell ing, a. Of or pertaining to spelling. [1913 Webster] {Spelling bee}, a spelling match. [U.S.] {Spelling book}, a book with exercises for teaching children to spell; a speller. {Spelling match}, a contest of skill in spelling words …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • spelling bee — ☆ spelling bee n. a spelling contest, esp. one in which a contestant is eliminated after misspelling a word …   English World dictionary

  • spelling bee — n AmE a competition in which the winner is the person who spells the most words correctly …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • spelling bee — spelling ,bee noun count AMERICAN a competition in which children have to spell difficult words …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • Spelling Bee — Scripps National Spelling Bee George W Bush reçoit le vainqueur de l édition 2008, Sameer Mishra, dans le Bureau ovale …   Wikipédia en Français

  • spelling bee — UK / US noun [countable] Word forms spelling bee : singular spelling bee plural spelling bees American a competition in which children have to spell difficult words …   English dictionary

  • spelling bee — noun a contest in which you are eliminated if you fail to spell a word correctly • Syn: ↑spelldown, ↑spelling contest • Hypernyms: ↑contest, ↑competition * * * noun, pl ⋯ bees [count] chiefly US : a contest in which contestants spell words aloud… …   Useful english dictionary

  • spelling bee — a spelling competition won by the individual or team spelling the greatest number of words correctly; spelldown. [1870 75] * * * ▪ contest also called  spelling match , or  spelldown        contest or game in which players attempt to spell… …   Universalium

  • Spelling bee (disambiguation) — Spelling bee may refer to:* Spelling bee, a competition in which contestants are asked to spell words * Specific spelling bees: ** Scripps National Spelling Bee, a highly competitive U.S. spelling bee held in Washington, D.C. ** Spelling Bee of… …   Wikipedia

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