ESTABLISHING SPELLING BEE CLUBS IN OUR SCHOOLS IS STILL A GREAT IDEA

The three Bahamian spellers who participated in the recent Scripps National Spelling Bee at the Gaylord Resort and Convention Centre near Washington, D.C., are pictured with His Excellency Sidney Collie (right),  Bahamas Ambassador to the United States and Permanent  Representative to the Organization of American States (OAS), and Mr. Theo Neilly, Bahamas Consul General to Washington, D.C., during a visit to The Bahamas Embassy Consular Annex on Thursday, May 30. The spellers from left to right:  Roy Seligman, Kevin Williams and Arjun Shetty. (Photo by Elisabeth Ann Brown)

OSWALD BROWN WRITES

WASHINGTON, D.C., June 11, 2019 — My strongly held religious beliefs have convinced me that today’s Facebook reminder is prophetic. I fully intended to write my regular OSWALD BROWN WRITES column this week by expanding on a suggestion I made yesterday under a post of a video of the appearance of the 2019 Scripps National Spelling Bee co-champions on the JIMMY KIMMEL LIVE television show on Friday, January 7, 2019.

OSWALD T. BROWN

Today’s Facebook reminder is an article I posted on June 11, 2018, several weeks after the excellent performance of last year’s Bahamas National Spelling Be Champion Johnathan Randall in the Scripps Bee, which mirrored the performances of The Bahamas’ three spellers in the 2019 Scripps Bee. They all spelt their two onstage words correctly, but did  not advance to the finals. I suggested back then that the Ministry of Education should “establish Spelling Bee Clubs in schools in the country and schedule competitions among schools throughout the year in the same manner that sports competitions are held.”

I reiterated that suggestion in my post under the JIMMY KIMMEL LIVE show video. Below is what I suggested as well as the article published on June 11, 2018, with a photo of Johnathan Randall and a copy of the program cover of the first Bahamas National Spelling Bee held on Thursday, March 26, 1998 at the Nassau Beach Hotel. I decided to post them together as this week’s OSWALD BROWN WRITES to underscore my strongly held belief that establishing Spelling Bee Clubs in our schools is a great idea.

A SUGGESTION FOR THE MINISTRY OF EDUCATION: Here’s some advice for the Ministry of Education: At the beginning of the new school year in September, please establish SPELLING BEE CLUBS at the appropriate level in our public schools and invite and encourage young students who demonstrate a degree of excellence in English to become members. As members of those clubs, they should be properly instructed in etymology and word comprehension to improve their chances of performing well in the written test at the annual Scripps National Spelling Bee if they successfully parlay the knowledge they gain in Spelling Bee Clubs into being chosen to represent The Bahamas at the Scripps Bee.

I had the pleasure of being introduced to 2019 Bahamas National Spelling Bee Champion Roy Seligman by his father, Arthur Seligman, when I attended a session of the recent Scripps National Spelling Bee  at the Gaylord Resort and Convention Center on Tuesday, May 28, 2019.

This suggestion, in my view, makes a lot of sense, given the fact all three of the spellers who represented The Bahamas in the 2019 Scripps Spelling Bee spelt their two onstage words correctly, but did not do well enough in the written test to be included among the 50 spellers who advanced to the finals. On the other hand, Jamaica’s champion, 11-year-old Darian Douglas, may very well have been among the co-champions on the Jimmy Kimmel Live Show if he had not been eliminated two rounds earlier than when the co-champions were declared when he failed to spell the word “diallage” by leaving out an “L”.

I am one of those Bahamians who firmly believe that the Jamaican educational system is not better than ours and, inherently, Jamaicans are not smarter than Bahamians, but rather that the pedagogical methods used to instruct our students in subjects like English need to be revised and improved.

Should those responsible for making decisions at the Ministry of Education decide to give serious consideration to my Spelling Bee Clubs idea, I would also like to suggest that Sheryl Wood, an educator who was based in Freeport when I was Editor of the Freeport News from 2003-2009, has the requisite skills to organize and administrate the operation of Spelling Bee Clubs in our school system. As my good friend the late Bahamian journalist P. Anthony White used to end his popular column in The PUNCH newspaper, I am offering this suggestion, “For what it’s worth.”

 

THE INTRODUCTION OF THE NATIONAL SPELLING BEE TO THE BAHAMAS

By OSWALD T. BROWN

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Minister of Labour Dion Foulkes sent me a “keepsake” reminder of one of the accomplishments in my life of which I am immensely proud: A program of the first Bahamas National Spelling Bee held in 1998 to select a Bahamas Spelling Champion to participate in the Scripps National Spelling Bee in Washington, D.C. that year. I often tend to take sole responsibility for introducing the Scripps National Spelling Bee to The Bahamas, but the contributions made by Mr. Foulkes towards my efforts to do so were equally as important.

The cover of the program for the first Bahamas National Spelling Bee Championship finals held at the Nassau Beach Hotel in 1998.

I previously lived in Washington, D.C., for 21 years before returning to The Bahamas “permanently” in 1996, and for more than 12 years, I was New Editor of The Washington Informer, an award-winning African American-owned newspaper that took over the sponsorship of the D.C. City-Wide Spelling Bee in 1982. I attended my first Scripps Bee in 1983 and was so impressed by its potential to have a tremendous impact on the educational system of The Bahamas that I promised myself back then that whenever I returned to The Bahamas I would make a concerted effort to convince those responsible for the administration of education in the country to support my idea to annually select a spelling champion to participate in the Scripps Bee.

Back then, newspapers were the primary sponsors of competitions through which Scripps National Spelling Bee contestants were determined, and when I became Editor of the Nassau Guardian in 1997, I discussed my idea with Kenneth “Six” Francis, the then Publisher and General Manager of The Guardian, and he threw his full support behind my initiative.

Fortunately, at the time Dion Foulkes was Minister of State for Education. As everyone in The Bahamas should know by now, whatever skills I possess in my chosen profession of journalism were nurtured and developed by Dion’s father, Sir Arthur Foulkes, who was News Editor at The Tribune when I joined that newspaper’s editorial staff as a trainee reporter in May of 1960. I later joined Sir Arthur at The Bahamian Times in 1965 after it was established several years earlier by the Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) to promote its political message among the Bahamian electorate. So, I have known Dion since he was a little boy who distributed copies of Bahamian Times and consider him to be a “brother.”

My “brother” Dion did not have to do much to convince the then Minister of Education Ivy Dumont, who later became Governor General of The Bahamas, to fully support the first Bahamas National Spelling Bee, given her life-long commitment to the educational development of young Bahamians. A good friend of mine, Agatha Dean Delancy, and Tonya Adderley, who were both then employed by IBM Bahamas, helped to convince IBM’s then General Manager Felix Stubbs to become a principal sponsor along with The Guardian of the first Bahamas National Spelling Bee in 1998.

Johnathan Randall, the 2018 Bahamas Spelling Chamoion, on stage during the 2018 Scripps National Spelling Bee.

The winner was Dominique Higgins, a 12-year-old Jordan Prince William High student, and he performed exceptionally well in the Scripps competition, but did not advance to the finals. Incidentally, 1998 was the year 12-year-old Jody-Anne Maxwell, Jamaica’s spelling champion, made history as the first non-American to win Scripps National Spelling Bee.

This was our 21st year competing in the Scripps Bee, and every year our spelling champion has done well, but none of them has advanced to the finals. I am convinced that this is because our spellers prepare for the Scripps Bee by learning to spell words by rote, rather than practicing to “break down” words based on their roots and etymology — the “study of the origin of words and the way in which their meanings have changed” throughout the years. What’s more, in recent years the Scripps Bee has added a written spelling and vocabulary test in the first rounds of the Bee and the scores from that test are added to points awarded for words spelt correctly during on-stage performances. The Bahamas’ champion Johnathan Randall, a 12-year-old Central Eleuthera High School student, correctly spelt both of his on-stage words, but did not advance to the finals rounds.

This year, a record number of 516 spellers participated in the Scripps Bee — a huge increase from the 291 that competed in 2017 — as a result of a new RSVBee invitation-only program launched last year, in “an attempt to open up the competition to kids who’ve had only limited access to the bee before, or no access at all,” according to the Scripps National Spelling Bee. It is worth noting that the 2018 Scripps National Spelling Bee Champion Karthik Nemmani of Texas became a contestant via the RSVBee program; therefore, I think The Bahamas should seriously consider entering a second contestant along with the champion in future Scripps Bee, possibly the first runner-up in future Bahamas competitions.

During the early years after the Scripps Bee was introduced in The Bahamas, I suggested that the Ministry of Education establish Spelling Bee Clubs in schools in the country and schedule competitions among schools throughout the year in the same manner that sports competitions are held. This is still a good idea and I hope that Minister of Education Jeff Lloyd gives this suggestion serious consideration. Mr. Lloyd has shown over the years that he has a deep interest in and commitment to the holistic educational development of young Bahamians, especially youth-at-risk, as he demonstrated during his leadership of the YEAST program.

I intend to suggest this and other ideas I have for the future of the Bahamas National Spelling Bee in a formal proposal to the Ministry of Education before the beginning of the new school year in the Fall of this year.