The Denver Post

Eighth-graders denied last chance to C-O-M-P-E-T-E

- By Elizabeth Hernandez Elizabeth Hernandez: 303-954-1311

Spelling bee-trayed.

That’s how some kids whose lives revolve around the Scripps National Spelling Bee felt after the competitio­n was canceled for the first time since World War II because of the pandemic.

With no plans for an alternativ­e or reschedule­d event, or extended eligibilit­y, aged-out eighth-graders will miss competitiv­ely spelling the final words many have been studying for most of their childhoods.

The cancellati­on of Bee Week, during which hundreds of word nerds from across the country would have gathered in National Harbor, Md., this week to try to outsmart Merriam-Webster, was expected, considerin­g the public health crisis.

But Colorado kids and their families were stunned to learn the competitio­n’s backup plans were

Z-I-L-C-H.

Paige Kimble, executive director of the Scripps National Spelling Bee, said Scripps tested the concept of an online bee and extending eighth-grade eligibilit­y, but there were too many kinks that couldn’t be ironed out to make it run equitably and uphold their standards.

“We dug deep and determined it’s just not possible, given how we’re designed. What’s happened is painful, and it’s put a big hole in a lot of people’s lives,” Kimble said. “It’s just a huge loss, and we’re grieving. And we know they’re grieving.”

Former Scripps Bee competitor turned spelling coach Sylvie Lamontagne, 17, of Lakewood, started a petition — more than 4,100 signatures strong as of Friday — asking the Scripps Bee to hold a modified 2020 spelling bee or extend eighth-grade eligibilit­y to 2021.

“There are kids who completely give up their social lives in middle school, and they do it willingly,” Lamontagne said. “It takes thousands of hours. I sincerely think it’s comparable to the amount of time that Olympic athletes put in or NCAA athletes put in. NCAA athletes got an eligibilit­y extension because everything was canceled. These kids are just as emotionall­y invested in this and put in as much time, but they don’t get this last chance. It really sends the message that athletics are inherently more important than academics, and I don’t think it’s a good message to send to kids that maybe have nerdier passions.”

Cameron Keith, a Boulder student who studied nearly 30 hours a week leading up to what would have been his fifth trip to the national bee, felt listless since hearing the competitio­n won’t allow eighth-graders a makeup year.

The 14-year-old, who advanced to the Scripps finals last year, was hoping to clinch the win, but also savor the closing chapters of the immaculate­ly spelled story of his youth.

“It was absolutely crushing to hear this,” Cameron said. “Thinking about the sacrifice that went into preparing for this — I’ve been doing not great, I guess. I’ve just been sitting around since.”

Synte Peacock, Cameron’s mom, doesn’t understand why Scripps wouldn’t try to provide something for the competitor­s — an online bee, a reschedule­d event at a safer date, an eligibilit­y extension for eighth-graders.

(Two Texas teenagers have establishe­d an alternate, online event called the SpellPundi­t Online National Spelling Bee, which will take place this week in lieu of the Scripps Bee.)

This week, Kimble said spellers will be honored via the bee’s website, which will showcase students who were able to qualify before the pandemic canceled many regional bees, and recognizin­g the eighth-graders who qualified last year.

“Everyone was in a state of disbelief,” Peacock said. “No one had really thought Scripps would just full out cancel and not do anything for the kids at all. They’re an organizati­on that depends on these kids. … The kids buy into this promise that they will work incredibly hard, and it’s gotten so hard in the last few years that you have to devote a huge amount of your life to be competitiv­e. Obviously, this year, the competitio­n couldn’t go ahead as planned, but they’ve turned around and said, ‘Hey, it’s over. Tough luck. Shut up.’ ”

Kimble said that before the new coronaviru­s struck, 155 children qualified to compete at the Scripps Bee — 55 of those eighthgrad­ers — but at least 5,000 more children were unable to attempt to qualify because of pandemicre­lated cancellati­ons.

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