Alternative Media Group

Alternative Media Group RSS feed

City News News Article

Sydney’s youngsters spell success

Author:
Angus Thompson
Posted:
Thursday, 28 May 2009

‘Scrumptious’ spelled doom, while ‘sovereign’ – S-O-V-E-R-E-I-G-N – crowned the winner at the launch of the 2009 NSW Premier’s Spelling Bee.
Year five students Jordan Powell and Jeremiah Iliffe were the final two left standing in the closing round of a mini spelling bee held with two other State finalists from 2008, Nancy Zou and Brianna McAlpine.
Jeremiah, from Woollahra Public School, came out on top as Jordan, from Kingswood Public School, stumbled on the word scrumptious.
Premier Nathan Rees said the results were outstanding for 10-year-old students.
“In Jordan’s time he will never forget the word scrumptious again,” he said.
Brianna was out on the word ‘mollusc’, and Nancy couldn’t quite get the spelling of ‘assimilate’ correct.
Launched at Sydney’s Darlington Public School last Thursday, it is the sixth consecutive year the Premier’s Spelling Bee has been held.
The competition is open to all students in NSW public schools and has two divisions. Junior for students in years three and four, and senior for students in years five and six.
“The spelling bee is an opportunity for NSW government school students in years three to six to improve their literacy skills in a fun way,” said Mr Rees.
“The success of the competition had already paid off.
“NSW spelling results are the best of any state in Australia,” he said.
Schools run in-school competitions to select two representatives from each division to compete at regional finals.
The NSW best young speller will be decided at a State final in Sydney on November 18.

by Sarah Burnell

090521_pd_9285

Like this article? Register as a subscriber here. It's free! We'll keep you up to date with new stories on the site.

Post a comment

  • White Bay consultation not meaningful, says council

    Inadequate consultation with residents is at the centre of the debate around the proposed cruise ship terminal in White Bay. Sydney Ports has announced two community workshops ...
    Read more

    White-Bau-289x217

  • Kinselas nightmare infuriates tenants

    Residents near Kinselas Hotel have endured months of intense noise from the Darlinghurst nightclub despite appealing to the Council and police several times for intervention. Neighbours of ...
    Read more

    Kinselas at 1.30am on Sunday

  • A spicy addition to the Malaysian market

    Restaurant chain Mamak has dominated the hawker-style Malaysian scene for years but Chinatown’s new addition Nonya has opened to compete, offering similar fare without the long ...
    Read more

    Nonya

  • Leaky taps may drain a landlord's wallet

    A new law may see a landlord’s bill flooded with additional water usage charges. As from January 31, all landlords must install minimum water efficiency measures in ...
    Read more

    leaky tap

  • News Briefs

    Valentine’s Day: a charitable event? Many romantics are choosing charity over chocolates this Valentine’s Day. The Heart Foundation, which invested over $13.6 million in cardiovascular research in 2011, is ...
    Read more

    Guide dog puppy in training. Photo: Guide Dogs NSW/ACT

Arts & Entertainment