PLEASANTON, CA — Pleasanton student Rithvi Balajee advanced to the semifinals of the 100th anniversary Scripps National Spelling Bee. She and the two other students from the Bay Area were sponsored by the San Ramon Valley Rotary Club in Danville.Rithvi, 12, attends 7th grade at the Stratford School in Pleasanton, enjoys reading, playing piano, singing, watching movies and listening to classical music, according to a ...
PLEASANTON, CA — Pleasanton student Rithvi Balajee advanced to the semifinals of the 100th anniversary Scripps National Spelling Bee. She and the two other students from the Bay Area were sponsored by the San Ramon Valley Rotary Club in Danville.
Rithvi, 12, attends 7th grade at the Stratford School in Pleasanton, enjoys reading, playing piano, singing, watching movies and listening to classical music, according to a Scripps bio. She's passionate about law, and is currently learning to speak Tamil.
The other students sponsored by the San Ramon Valley Rotary Club are Aiden Meng, a 6th grader at Orinda Intermediate School, and Aren Lee, an 8th grader at King's Academy in Sunnyvale.
The three student made it through the quarterfinals, and are advancing to the semifinals Wednesday night. See here to learn more about the other finalists.
The semifinal round airs from 8-10 p.m. Eastern Time Wednesday and the final round airs from 8-10 p.m. Thursday on the ION network, which is owned by Scripps.
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The Scripps National Spelling Bee is an end-of-the-school-year tradition that began in 1925, when nine newspapers held spelling bees and the winners squared off for the spelling title. Since then, millions of spellers have participated in the bee, which is held just outside the nation’s capital, at a convention center on the banks of the Potomac River.
Although the bee itself is 100 years old, this is the 97th national spelling competition. It was paused from 1943 to 1945 because of World War II and again in 2020 because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
This year's champion will be the 110th, because the bee ended in a two-way tie several times and an eight-way tie in 2019.
The participants, all under the age of 15, must not have passed beyond the eighth grade. To make it to the quarterfinals in Maryland, the 243 spellers prevailed first in local spelling bees.
At least one speller from each of the 50 states and the District of Columbia qualified for the bee, along with students from U.S. territories Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands and the Northern Mariana Islands; and from Canada, the Bahamas, Germany, Ghana, Kuwait and Nigeria.
Sixty spellers were eliminated in Tuesday's preliminary spelling and vocabulary rounds, leaving 183 to take a written spelling and vocabulary test ahead of Wednesday's quarterfinals. Another 84 were eliminated by the test, leaving 99 quarter finalists on the stage Wednesday morning.
The Associated Press contributed reporting.