It was down to the final two.
Emma Moore seized her opportunity when “onomastics” was misspelled by her competitor. After correctly spelling that word and then “avionics,” the sixth-grader from Southwest City Elementary School in McDonald County was declared The Joplin Globe’s 2010 spelling bee champion.
Emma seemed to be in disbelief, rooted to her spot on the stage of Missouri Southern State University’s Taylor Auditorium.
“I didn’t even study that word,” she said before bursting into tears.
Almost 100 fourth-, fifth- and sixth-graders from the Four-State Area participated Wednesday afternoon in the 33rd annual spelling bee.
The second-place winner, Nathaniel Basham, a sixth-grader from Trinity Lutheran School in Freistatt, received a trophy and $75.
Henry White, a fourth-grader from Thomas Jefferson Independent Day School in Joplin, won third place, earning a trophy and $50.
After winning the bee, Emma, who called the experience “amazing,” was joined on stage by her mother, Michelle Moore, who also was in tears.
“You are the best in the whole world,” Moore told her daughter, enveloping her in a hug.
Moore said Emma worked toward the spelling bee on her own, studying the list of words primarily by herself.
“She just did it with a plain old dictionary and with her free time,” Moore said. “I am so proud of her. Really, she’s remarkable. She always comes through.”
More remarkable than Emma’s winning, Moore said, is her “heart of gold.” She recently qualified for the upcoming McDonald County spelling bee but gave her spot to her twin sister, Chloe, so they could each compete in a bee.
Micah Butterfield, a fifth-grader at Seneca Elementary School, said during the half-hour break between rounds that she was nervous, though she had survived the first round by spelling “ringleader” correctly.
“There’s a lot of good other spellers,” she said.
Micah said she studied the word list with her mother when she had free time, and she came prepared with a strategy to help her get as far as she could.
“You have to think about the words and the letters you’re saying before you spell it,” she said. “You have to take your time.”
Micah’s mother, Cheryl, said she was proud that her daughter was representing her school in the bee.
“I want her to be proud of herself, and whatever she does, she does,” she said. “I think it’s a good experience for her to build confidence.”
Valeria Schwent, a sixth-grader at St. Lawrence Catholic School in Monett, also survived the first round, on the word “stain.” She said during the break that she was feeling “pretty good right now.”
“I just want to have fun,” she said.
David Ackiss, an English professor at Missouri Southern and the bee’s spellmaster for the past 29 years, said he returns to the bee year after year because it is fun.
“It’s fun to watch the contest from the seat I have, and I’m rooting for all the kids,” he said. “I also want to honor those kids who excel in ways that often aren’t honored in our country.”
The bee lasted just less than four hours, including a practice round and a 30-minute break. Seventeen spellers went out in the first round, which included words such as “lioness” and “qualify.”
In the second round, 35 spellers were eliminated. Words in that round included “elopement,” “abominable” and “aliveness.”
Ackiss pulled out the hardest words — such as “lachrymose” and “mimotype” — beginning in round three, during which 25 spellers left the stage.
Globe Editor Carol Stark said before the competition that spelling has gone by the wayside in the era of text messaging and Tweeting, in which participants generally abbreviate as much as possible.
“You all are already way ahead of people in life because you know how to spell,” she told the contestants.
Champion
Emma Moore, from Southwest City Elementary School, received a trophy and $100.
Home
<img src="http://www.joplinglobeonline.com/images/zope/extra.gif" border=0>Southwest City girl wins spelling bee<font color="#ff0000"> w/ slide show</font>
- Local & State News
-
-
Water company cites reconnections
Matt Andrews, a worker with Missouri American Water Co., guides equipment Friday afternoon in connection with a water main project at 28th Street and Bird Avenue. Company officials are crediting a mild winter for contributing to the company’s reconnections since the May 22 tornado.
The May 22 tornado has caused a dramatic drop in water usage for the Missouri American Water Co., but things are starting to turn around — one reconnection at a time.
Continued ... - Survivor of ’78 Connor collapse dead at age 64
- County asks for dismissal of sheriff’s suit
- Winter weather back in forecast
- Weather service upgrading radar at Springfield station
-
- Sports
-
-
Colgan's Cichon wins No. 500
The 500-win plateau is an achievement that does not come without some winning formula.
- Prep Roundup: Joplin's Wood breaks school record
- Hester, Lions prep for Emporia State
- MSSU's Gibson sets career highs in consecutive games
- PSU women seek record-tying 22nd win
-
- Crime & Courts
-
-
Authorities term deaths of teens murder-suicide
Authorities say a teenage woman apparently shot her estranged boyfriend several times before turning the gun on herself and taking her own life.
- Woman accused of endangering three children
- Kansas City man facing drug charge after brief chase
- Miami man killed while trying to seek help after accident
- Homeless man waives hearing on arson charge
-
Authorities term deaths of teens murder-suicide
- Death Notices
-
-
Mabel M. Deffenbaugh
Mabel M. Deffenbaugh, 99, a retired food service employee for Crowder College, passed away Thursday, Feb. 9, 2012.
- Sue McDonough
- Seneca Mathews
- Lucille M. Williams
- Jimmie D. Fair
-
Mabel M. Deffenbaugh
- Opinion
-
-
Our View: Santorum's Achilles' ear
Rick Santorum knocked everyone for a loop this week, not just with his victory in Missouri but with the landslide size of the thing.
Continued ... - Our View: Are school loans next 'debt bomb'?
- Our View: A better way of limit terms
- Your View: Is it our fault?
- Your View: No way to run a school
-
Our View: Santorum's Achilles' ear
- Business
-
-
Obama call for manufacturing revival a tough goal
President Barack Obama is making a strong election-year push for an economic revival “built on American manufacturing.” But he faces an uphill slog, with little consensus even within his own party on how to do it.
Continued ... - Stocks fall sharply as Greek deal is held up
- Budget deficit drops to $27 billion in January
- Feds slap CA utility for San Onofre ammonia leak
- Chicago officials make plans for potential massive protests of G-8, NATO summits
-
Obama call for manufacturing revival a tough goal
- Lifestyles
-
-
Can't miss movies: 2012 features big-buzz blockbusters
Sure, it’s only February, but we’re already planning out our trips to the multiplex over the next 10 months.
- Play, concert geared toward Valentine’s crowd
- Dance party pairs electronic music with sci-fi costumes
- Titanic 100th anniversary under way
- Joe Hadsall: ‘Skyrim’ should have addiction warning
-
- National News
-
-
Obama budget predicts $1.3T deficit for 2012
The White House on Friday confirmed a report that President Barack Obama’s new budget predicts a $1.3 trillion deficit for the ongoing fiscal year. The deficit would drop to $901 billion next year under the administration’s tax and spending policies.
- Navy names littoral combat ship after Gabrielle Giffords
- Under fire, Obama adjusts his birth control policy
- They’re back: Social issues overtake US politics
- Requirements for consumer health insurance summaries unveiled
-
- Obituaries
-
-
Marvin R. Correll
Marvin R. Correll, of Columbus, Kan., passed away Feb. 9, 2012, at Landmark Hospital in Joplin, Mo.
- Judith Ann Johnson
- Seneca Black Elk Mathews
- Gisela A. “Annie” Putman
- Marceline “Marcy” Jewell Johnson
-






