Community Corner
9 MI Students To Compete In 2026 Scripps National Spelling Bee
ION is the official television home and primary national broadcaster of the Scripps National Spelling Bee.
Nine young spellers from Michigan are headed to historic Constitution Hall in Washington, D.C., later this month for what amounts to the Olympics for kids who casually know the linguistic roots of obscure words.
The annual Scripps Spelling Bee begins with preliminary rounds on Tuesday, May 26, and concludes on Thursday, May 28, with the final round. The 101st spelling bee features 247 spellers from all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Guam, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands and Department of Defense Schools in Europe.
Spellers from Michigan are:
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- Dean Handley Turner, 13, eighth grader, Wyandot Middle School, Clinton Township
- Divya Choudhary, 12, seventh grader, Canton Charter Academy, Canton
- Sanskriti Parihar, 13, eighth grader, Fremont Middle School, Fremont
- Heron Bothwell, 11, fifth grader, Parkwood - Upjohn Elementary School, Kalamazoo
- Alec Phillips, 14, eighth grader, Chatfield School, Lapeer
- Henry O'Neal, 14, eighth grader, Mason County Central Middle School, Scottville
- Sidhanth Vetrivel, 14, eighth grader, Upton Middle School, St. Joseph
- Minna Danziger, 13, seventh grader, Leland Public School, Leland
- Claudio Ardanese, 14, eighth grader, Berkshire Middle School, Beverly Hills
ION is the official television home and primary national broadcaster of the Scripps National Spelling Bee.
ION, a free channel on most cable, satellite and streaming platforms, will broadcast the semifinals and finals beginning at 8 p.m. Eastern on May 27 and May 28.
Find out what's happening in Across Michiganfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
By the time spellers reach the nationals, they’ve already survived classroom bees, school bees, district bees, county bees, regionals, and state-level competitions just to earn a seat under the lights at the national landmark concert hall.
Past spellers have been tripped up in the final round by such words as “gomphosis,” the specialized fibrous joint that anchors and holds your teeth in place within the jawbone; “tauromachian,” the art, practice, or technique of bullfighting; and “pyrrolidone.”
Words in the final round are especially difficult because they come from many rare and complex language origins, including Welsh, Yiddish, German, Sanskrit, and Nahuatl. Contestants must understand spelling patterns from multiple languages, many of which include silent letters and unusual pronunciations that do not match English spelling rules. They often contain unpredictable vowel combinations and complicated consonant patterns that make them challenging to hear and spell correctly.
In addition, many words in the final round come from scientific taxonomy, medicine, music, or botany, exposing spellers to highly specialized vocabulary with obscure meanings. French spellings, as well as Greek and Latin roots, add another layer of difficulty because they include accents, silent endings, and unfamiliar letter arrangements.
To prepare for the rigorous competition ahead, spellers are handed a 4,000-word study guide along with a cautionary reminder that the competition will “often end with words you haven’t studied.”
The format itself is ruthless, including spelling, vocabulary rounds and written rounds, and the possibility of a 90-second spell-off to decide ties in the final round.
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