Monday, January 16, 2023

Are You Ready?



Have you signed up for the Homeschool Spelling Bee yet? Village Home hosts the Championship Bee for grades 4-8, where the winner will participate in the Regional Spelling Bee for a chance to compete in the National Spelling Bee! The Junior Bee for grades K-3 gives younger kids a chance to experience the excitement of the Bee as well!

You can register at https://www.villagehome.org/scripps-spelling-bee/ by January 30 to participate in the February 7 event.

How are the Bees conducted? 

In each Bee, all spellers compete together. Each speller is given a word to spell. The speller should say the word, spell the word, and say the word again. If the word is spelled correctly, the speller goes on to compete in the next round. If the word is spelled incorrectly, the speller is eliminated. (If all spellers in one round spell incorrectly, they all stay in for the next round.)

Before spelling a word, the speller can ask for the definition, the language of origin, any alternate pronunciation, use in a sentence, and part of speech. 

There will be at least one round in each Bee where the spellers are asked for the definition of a word. The pronouncer will give the speller a word, and offer two choices of what the word means. A correct choice means the speller stays in for the next round; an incorrect choice means the speller is eliminated.

Email bees@villagehome.org for a copy of the study lists! The words in the Bee will be from those lists.

Saturday, December 24, 2022

What Are You Reading This Month?

Did you know the Bee has an official book club?

This month, the Bee's Bookshelf selection is Escape from Mr. Lemoncello's Library by Chris Grabenstein. Enter the official monthly sweepstakes to win one of three copies! And, click below to enter our End-of-Year Sweepstakes - one winner will receive a copy of every book selected in 2022!

Escape from Mr. Lemoncello's Library book cover

Visit www.spellingbee.com for more news and tips!


Monday, December 19, 2022

The Bee is Back!



Live and in person, Village Home will be hosting the 2023 Homeschool Spelling Bee ON CAMPUS! All homeschoolers in Oregon are welcome to participate!

Village Home hosts the Spelling Bee as a service to the homeschool community in Oregon to encourage spelling and literacy. In addition to our Championship Bee for participants in grades 4 through 8, we also offer a junior competition for participants in grades K through 3. This low-pressure Bee is a fun way for younger spellers to get their feet wet.

Register for the Bee at https://www.villagehome.org/scripps-spelling-bee/ !

And follow this B-log for tips, tricks, and news of the Bee!




Thursday, December 30, 2021

Broken Words!

 

One way to learn and remember how words are spelled is to break them down into their component parts - prefix, root, suffix. Or think about how the words developed from their origins - did two words come together to become one?

But English is a tricky language! Here are some words that don't break up, or aren't "glued together" the way you would expect.

app: Are any of your apps broken? Your app is! You know it's short for application. But did you know that there's a glue line between p and p? The word comes down from Latin applicatio, which is ap plus plicatio (based on the root plica, "fold"). Ap is actually ad ("to") changed to make a better surface for gluing. The glue stuck — better than the lication did.

copter: Ask someone what helicopter is made from, and they'll probably say heli plus copter. But actually it's helico- ("spiral") plus pter ("wing"), same as in pterodactyl, "wing finger". Obviously nobody says it like "helico-pter" — pronunciation trumps etymology. So this is one whirlybird that flies even when broken off badly.

demo: The glue line in this word comes after the de. You may know de as meaning "from" or signifying the reversal of an action. In this case, in the original Latin it actually meant "completely" and was tacked onto the root monstra- ("show") to make it stronger. You might wonder for a moment why we wouldn't break demonstration after the n rather than the o — until you see the demon. There's also a bit of a history in English of making short forms that end in o.

prep: This word is just preparing to say preparation. But the glue line is after pre, which is from Latin for "before." The rest is from the Latin para- root, which means "make ready," but is clearly not fully ready in this word. When we say it, we actually say the p at the start of the next syllable, like we do in prepare, but in preparation we have a short vowel so we think of it as a short syllable, which means we think of the p as stuck to the previous syllable. And the rest breaks away.

decal: A lot has come unstuck from this word — but it's still stuck together at the glue line. In English we shortened it from decalcomania, which came from French décalcomanie, a mania for tracing things, from de plus calquer ("trace") plus, of course, manie. We peeled most of this word off but, like a stubborn decal, some of it stayed stuck on.

-aholic: Workaholic, shopaholic, whatever: we know -aholic means it's an addiction. But while addiction can make for broken people, in this case it makes a broken word, too. Alcoholic is of course from alcohol plus icalcohol, for its part, comes from Arabic al kuhl, with al meaning "the" and kuhl referring to a kind of eye makeup. Yeah, the meaning has shifted a little, too...

perm, perma-: A perm is meant to hold permanently (or at least for a long time). Permafrost is permanently frozen. But the word permanent hasn't been so lucky. Once again, the little handle on the word — in this case, the prefix per ("thoroughly") — holds together while the manent, from the Latin root mane- ("remain"), is mostly gone. With perm you're like Wile E. Coyote stuck holding the handle of something that has mostly blown up and gone. And left your hair scorched and frizzy, too.

comp: If someone promised you comp tickets, you'd be unhappy if you just got the stub, right? But with comp, that's all you do get — and it's like one of those tickets where it's been torn not at the dotted line but a bit farther in. Comp comes from complimentary, which comes from compliment (originally referring to a courtesy), which comes from Latin com ("with"; used as an intensifier) plus plementum, from the verb plere ("fill"). Did you notice how that's spelled plem and not plim? Guess what: they come from the same source, but compliment came by way of French in the 1600s, while we got complement from Latin a bit earlier.

info: So how do you like your comp info? Is it informing you of the forms in the words? You know, of course, that info is short for information (look, another word breaking off at the o!). You may or may not have ever stopped to notice that information is from in plus form plus ation. To inform someone is to shape their knowledge — to put it in form. Or, for the short version, in fo.

nickname: There are also some words we don't think of as shortened at all — because something got stuck to them accidentally and we've just assumed it was always there. An alternative name was originally an eke-name, but people hearing "an eke-name" came to think it was "a nekename," and that in turn came to be heard as "a nickname." So it stole the n from the an — like something sticky just set down for a moment that takes something with it when it's picked up. An ewt became a newt the same way. Incidentally, an orange, an apron, and an adder used to be a norange, a napron, and a nadder — but that's a whole nother thing.

(These words are from the website https://theweek.com/articles/446024/10-words-that-are-badly-broken)

Find out about the 2022 Homeschool Spelling Bee and how to sign up at villagehome.org/scripps-spelling-bee!

Monday, December 20, 2021

Fun Website for Spelling Practice!

 


The website at https://www.spellingtraining.com/ has some great tools for practicing spelling! You can upload words at a time of your choice (maybe from the Bee practice lists!) and then...

Practice the words...

Do an online spelling test...

Play games using the words...

Learn how to pronounce the words...

Explore the meanings of the words...

Use this tool to work on the words you might find more challenging!

Wednesday, December 15, 2021

Great Books for Great Spellers!

 


Did you know?

The Spelling Bee words are arranged by grade level - and grouped by difficulty. The Spelling Bee folks have organized words into "One Bee" "Two Bee" and "Three Bee" levels.

One Bee words are used in the Village Home Junior Bee, for grades 1-3. Two Bee words cover grades 4-6, and Three Bee words are at 7-8 grade level.

All the words in the school Bees are contained in these great books. Reading them will help spellers learn the words and their meanings, and they're a lot of fun as well!

One Bee Reading Level 

First Grade: 

  • Always Anjali by Sheetal Sheth 
  • Rodeo Red by Maripat Perkins 
  • The Camping Trip by Jennifer K. Mann 
  • Izzy Gizmo by Pip Jones 

Second Grade: 

  • Girl on a Motorcycle by Amy Novesky 
  • Vera Vance, Comics Star (After-School Superstars) by Claudia Mills 
  • Paper Son: The Inspiring Story of Tyrus Wong, Immigrant and Artist by Julie Leung 
  • The Boy Who Dreamed of Infinity: A Tale of the Genius Ramanujan by Amy Alznauer 

Third Grade: 

  • Stella Díaz Has Something to Say by Angela Dominguez 
  • The Littlest Voyageur by Margi Preus 
  • A Boy Called Bat by Elana K. Arnold 
  • The Cat Who Came in Off the Roof by Annie M.G. Schmidt 

Two Bee Reading Level

Fourth Grade: 

  • Skunk and Badger by Amy Timberlake
  • Lost Cities by Giles Laroche
  • From the Desk of Zoe Washington by Janae Marks 
  • Bump by Matt Wallace 

Fifth Grade:

  • Rocket Science: A Beginner's Guide to the Fundamentals of Spaceflight by Andrew Rader 
  • All Thirteen: The Incredible Cave Rescue of the Thai Boys’ Soccer Team by Christina Soontornvat
  • The Clockwork Crow by Catherine Fisher
  • Amari and the Night Brothers by B.B. Alston 

Sixth Grade: 

  • The Sisters of Straygarden Place by Haley Chewins
  • Facing Frederick: The Life of Frederick Douglass, a Monumental American Man by Tonya Bolden
  • The World Between Blinks by Amie Kaufman & Ryan Graudin
  • The Parker Inheritance by Varian Johnson

Three Bee Reading Level 

Seventh Grade:

  • When You Trap a Tiger by Tae Keller
  • The Blackthorn Key by Kevin Sands
  • The 13 ½ Lives of Captain Bluebear by Walter Moers
  • Queen of the Sea by Dylan Meconis 

Eighth Grade:

  • The Kingdom of Back by Marie Lu
  • Turtle Boy by M. Evan Wolkenstein
  • The Snow Fell Three Graves Deep by Allan Wolf
  • Mortal Engines by Philip Reeve
  • Dragon Sword and Wind Child by Noriko Ogiwara
  • The Warrior Heir by Cinda Williams Chima
  • Slider by Pete Hautman
  • Outrun the Moon by Stacey Lee 
Don't forget to sign up for the Bee at villagehome.org/scripps-spelling-bee!

Thursday, December 9, 2021

What's Your Favorite Word This Year?



The English language is changing all the time! In fact, every year the Merriam Webster dictionary (official dictionary of the Spelling Bee) adds new words! Usually they are words that have been in very common use over the previous year. Here are some of the new words added in 2021:
  • TBH : an abbreviation for "to be honest." TBH is frequently used in social media and text messaging.
  • because : by reason of : because of — often used in a humorous way to convey vagueness about the exact reasons for something. This preposition use of because is versatile; it can be used, for example, to avoid delving into the overly technical (“the process works because science”) or to dismiss explanation altogether (“they left because reasons”).
  • amirite : slang used in writing for "am I right" to represent or imitate the use of this phrase as a tag question in informal speech. An example: “English spelling is consistently inconsistent, amirite?”
  • FTW : an abbreviation for "for the win" —used especially to express approval or support. In social media, FTW is often used to acknowledge a clever or funny response to a question or meme.
  • super-spreader : an event or location at which a significant number of people contract the same communicable disease — often used before another noun (as in a “super-spreader event”). The term super-spreader originally referred to a highly contagious person capable of passing on a disease to many others, and now can also refer to a single place or occasion where many others are infected.
  • long COVID : a condition that is marked by the presence of symptoms (such as fatigue, cough, shortness of breath, headache, or brain fog) which persist for an extended period of time (such as weeks or months) following a person's initial recovery from COVID-19 infection.
  • Oobleck : a mixture of corn starch and water that behaves like a liquid when at rest and like a solid when pressure is applied. Oobleck gets its name from the title of a story by Dr. Seuss, Bartholomew and the Oobleck, and is a favorite component in kids’ science experiments.
  • chicharron : a small piece of pork belly or pig skin that is fried and eaten usually as a snack : pork rind also : a piece of food that resembles a chicharron.
  • Goetta : meat (such as pork) mixed with oats, onions, and spices and fried in the form of a patty.
  • air fryer : an airtight, usually small electrical appliance for quick cooking of foods by means of convection currents circulated rapidly by a fan.
What new words would you like to see in the dictionary in 2022?

Don't forget to sign up for the Bee at https://www.villagehome.org/scripps-spelling-bee/