89th Scripps National Spelling Bee
89th Scripps National Spelling Bee | |
---|---|
Date | May 24–26, 2016 |
Location | Gaylord National Resort & Convention Center, National Harbor, Maryland |
Winner |
Jairam Hathwar Nihar Janga (co-winners) |
Age |
13 (Hathwar) 11 (Janga) |
Residence |
Painted Post, New York (Hathwar) Austin, Texas (Janga) |
Sponsor |
Corning Rotary Club (Hathwar)[1] Houston Public Media (Janga)[2][3] |
Sponsor location |
Corning, New York (Hathwar) Houston, Texas (Janga) |
Winning word |
Feldenkrais (Hathwar) gesellschaft (Janga) |
No. of contestants | 284 |
Pronouncer | Jacques Bailly |
Preceded by | 88th Scripps National Spelling Bee |
Followed by | 90th Scripps National Spelling Bee |
The 89th Scripps National Spelling Bee was held at the Gaylord National Resort & Convention Center in National Harbor, Maryland (its sixth year at this location) on May 24–26, 2016.[4][5]
Competition
The competition began with 284 contestants (143 boys and 141 girls), winnowed down from 11 million students who participated in local bees around the country.[6] The age range of the spellers was 6 to 15, 70 of whom were making repeat appearances. 29 spellers were relatives of prior contestants.[6] For the first time, a first-grader qualified, 6-year old Akash Vukoti of Texas.[7][8]
On Tuesday May 24, all contestants took a written test. Then, on May 25, 34 contestants were eliminated when they missed their first word in the first oral round, leaving 251 spellers.[9] By late on May 25, the field had been reduced to 171. After the written scores were added, the field was further reduced to 45 finalists.[7][10]
The final rounds were held on May 26, beginning with the 45 finalists.[11] After round 4, only 21 spellers were left,[7] and after round 7 there were 10.[12]
Notwithstanding efforts to avoid a third year running of inseparable co-winners (see below), Jairam Hathwar and Nihar Janga were declared co-champions after 24 championship rounds.[13][14]
Co-champion Nihar Janga, at age 11, was the first winner since 2002 to win in his first appearance at the national bee.[15] Jairam Hathwar became the second sibling of a past champion (his brother Sriram Hathwar was co-champion in 2014) to win the competition.[16]
Thirteen-year old Snehaa Kumar of Folsom, California placed third, falling on "usucapion" in the 16th round, the first championship round.[17][18] Sylvie Lamontagne of Lakewood, Colorado, also 13, placed fourth, missing "chaoborine" in the 15th round.[15] Other finalists included Sreeniketh Vogoti, Smrithi Upadhyayula, Jashun Paluru, Rutvik Gandhasri, Cooper Komatsu, and Mitchell Robson.
Changes this year
After two consecutive years where the Bee ended in a tie, it was announced in April 2016 that harder words would be used in the final rounds.[19]
The first place prize this year was increased to $40,000 from $30,000, second to $30,000 and third to $20,000.[19]
Word list championship round
- myoclonus
- pneumatomachy
- hirundine
- comitatus
- moshav
- vasopressin
- esquisse
- chaussure
- epistaxis
- galago
- illicium
- chubasco
- guyot
- panachure
- palagonite
- Wehrmacht
- ptyxis
- levirate
- lovat
- soogee
- betony
- Venetic
- amanitin
- chalazion
- hypozeuxis
- rhinolophid
- ptyalism
- calamistrum
- theriaca
- iiwi
- prochoos
- shubunkin
- epergne
- gisant
- poitrel
- kakiemon
- caracal
- bailliage
- aplustre
- ekka
- Collyridian
- quillon
- nasaump
- chaoborine
- launeddas
- berceuse
- usucapion
- geländesprung
- schepen
- achalasia
- cypraeiform
- ripieno
- melilot
- lerot
- giallolino
- harmattan
- appetitost
- fothergilla
- ergataner
- keurboom
- biniou
- gyttja
- taoiseach
- chremslach
- uintjie
- whau
- gerrhosaurid
- draahthaar
- rafraîchissoir
- ayacahuite
- doab
- promyshlennik
- lygaeid
- écorché
- krausen
- villancico
- myiasis
- parinari
- Stymphalian
- ynambu
- pavonazzetto
- phulkari
- Kjeldahl
- haab
- guignolet
- Hohenzollern
- juamave
- Groenendael
- Mischsprache
- tetradrachm
- zindiq
- euchologion
- Feldenkrais
- gesellschaft
References
- ↑ (10 March 2016). Hathwar wins another trip to Scripps, The Leader (Corning)
- ↑ (26 May 2016). Leander ISD student, 11, named co-champion in National Spelling Bee, Austin American-Statesman
- ↑ Levin, Matt (26 May 2016). Texas 11-year-old Nihar Janga crowned co-champ at national spelling bee, Houston Chronicle
- ↑ When is the Scripps National Spelling Bee?, spellingbee.com, Retrieved 4 March 2016
- ↑ Porter, Toriano (4 March 2016). Spelling bee champ upholds family tradition, Lee's Summit Journal
- 1 2 (19 May 2016). The nation readies for the 2016 Scripps National Spelling Bee, WRTV
- 1 2 3 Theobald, Bill (26 May 2016). 171 survive in National Spelling Bee, but only 45 advance, USA Today
- ↑ (26 May 2016). National spelling bee moves into final day, USA Today
- ↑ Theobald, Bill (25 May 2016). 251 spellers survive in Scripps National Spelling Bee, USA Today
- ↑ Finalists (2016), spellingbee.com, Retrieved 26 May 2016
- ↑ (18 May 2016). ‘SportsCenter’ anchor Kevin Negandhi to host finals of Scripps National Spelling Bee on ESPN, American Bazaar
- ↑ Official Tweet, @scrippsbee ("Rd 7 ends w/10 #SpellingBee finalists! Watch LIVE on @espn @ 8PM! ...)
- ↑ Farrington, Dana (26 May 2016). Another Year, Another Impasse As 2 Win Scripps National Spelling Bee, The Two-Way, NPR, retrieved 26 May 2016
- ↑ Tumlty, Brian (27 May 2016). Painted Post seventh-grader Jairam Hathwar is national bee co-champion, Democrat and Chronicle
- 1 2 Nuckols, Ben (28 May 2016). National Spelling Bee co-champions include youngest ever, Associated Press
- ↑ Associated Press (27 May 2016), "ESPN"
- ↑ Nuckols, Ben (27 May 2016). National Spelling Bee ends in its unlikeliest tie to date, Associated Press
- ↑ Musal, Steve (27 May 2016). California teen Snehaa Ganesh Kumar takes third in Spelling Bee, MedillDC
- 1 2 Mele, Christopher (22 April 2016). Harder Words Await Competitors at National Spelling Bee, The New York Times