Sacramento County Spelling Bee

2008 Competition

Advisor: Ms. Knapp

Kerr Students begin their quest for competition at the 2008 Scripps National Spelling Bee on November 28, 2007, during period six in room B-5 (and after school, if necessary). Information is available from Kerr English teachers. To discover more about the National Spelling Bee, please click here.


 

Joseph Kerr Middle School Qualifiers

WINNER:      RUNNER-UP:     

7th Grade Participants

Gelene Amog
Madison Buccola
Lindsey Hemenez
Kara Lemos
Troy Mahon
Keana Moore
Brendan Morrison
Melissa Natividad
Ciera Payongayong
Kayla Richardson
Samantha Sharp
Mary Vang
Edwyn Wong

8th Grade Participants

Kian Bradley
Michelle Dang
Tracy Huynh
Gerald Moen
Matt Munoz
Fineasi Polaulo
Kristi Rammer
Virginia Rodriguez
Phillip Rones
Alexis Saborio

 

2008 Schedule

Fall 2007
Most students will receive study materials from local newspaper sponsors and schools.

January-February, 2008
Most school spelling bees will take place.

February, 2008
This is the first possible date for a sponsor to conduct its final local spelling bee.

March, 2008
This is the last possible date for a sponsor to conduct its final local spelling bee.

May, 2008
2008 Scripps National Spelling Bee competition days
Please visit this Web site in early May to obtain details regarding the ABC television broadcast of the 2008 Scripps National Spelling Bee.

 

What is the origin of the term spelling bee?

 

The word bee, as used in spelling bee, is a language puzzle that has never been satisfactorily accounted for. A fairly old and widely-used word, it refers to a community social gathering at which friends and neighbors join together in a single activity (sewing, quilting, barn raising, etc.), usually to help one person or family. The earliest known example in print is a spinning bee, in 1769. Other early occurrences are husking bee (1816), apple bee (1827), and logging bee (1836). Spelling bee is apparently an American term. It first appeared in print in 1875, but it seems certain that the word was used orally for several years before that.

Those who used the word, including most early students of language, assumed that it was the same word as referred to the insect. They thought that this particular meaning had probably been inspired by the obvious similarity between these human gatherings and the industrious, social nature of a beehive. But in recent years scholars have rejected this explanation, suggesting instead that this bee is a completely different word. One possibility is that it comes from the Middle English word bene, which means "a prayer" or "a favor" (and is related to the more familiar word boon). In England, a dialectal form of this word, been or bean, referred to "voluntary help given by neighbors toward the accomplishment of a particular task." (Webster's Third New International Dictionary). Bee may simply be a shortened form of been, but no one is entirely certain.


Kerr Home