Posted on Apr 24, 2022
‘They’re reaching for this’: Students compete in Yup’ik and Iñupiaq spelling bees - Alaska Public...
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Posted 2 y ago
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PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
..."There was one word she found really difficult to spell: cuukiiq. It means sock.
“I just forgot one u,” she said.
Canoe was one of 13 students, in third through eighth grade, who competed in this weekend’s 10th annual Yup’ik spelling bee. They came from all over Alaska: Akiachak, Akiak, Anchorage, Brevig Mission, Dillingham, Golovin, Nunam Iqua and Stebbins.
Freda Dan, organizer of the Yup’ik contest, was one of the judges. She said the spelling bee gives students the opportunity to practice reading and writing a language they might only speak or hear. Canoe, for example, doesn’t speak Yup’ik but hears it spoken by elders.
“This might be the only time they learn how to spell,” Dan said. “Maybe it never happens again. So this is a really big opportunity.”
This weekend’s event also included the second annual Iñupiaq spelling bee with three competitors.
Among the challenges of the day: capitalization. Both the Yup’ik and Iñupiaq competitors struggled with the word for the Yukon River, for instance. In Iñupiaq, the word is Kuuvak. When not capitalized, kuuvak means big river. The judges were asking for the capitalized version, but students didn’t know unless they asked for the definition.
Kuuvak was the word that brought the Iñupiaq competition to a close. Fifth grader Kopeck Kaitlyn Alston from Brevig Mission placed first."...
..."There was one word she found really difficult to spell: cuukiiq. It means sock.
“I just forgot one u,” she said.
Canoe was one of 13 students, in third through eighth grade, who competed in this weekend’s 10th annual Yup’ik spelling bee. They came from all over Alaska: Akiachak, Akiak, Anchorage, Brevig Mission, Dillingham, Golovin, Nunam Iqua and Stebbins.
Freda Dan, organizer of the Yup’ik contest, was one of the judges. She said the spelling bee gives students the opportunity to practice reading and writing a language they might only speak or hear. Canoe, for example, doesn’t speak Yup’ik but hears it spoken by elders.
“This might be the only time they learn how to spell,” Dan said. “Maybe it never happens again. So this is a really big opportunity.”
This weekend’s event also included the second annual Iñupiaq spelling bee with three competitors.
Among the challenges of the day: capitalization. Both the Yup’ik and Iñupiaq competitors struggled with the word for the Yukon River, for instance. In Iñupiaq, the word is Kuuvak. When not capitalized, kuuvak means big river. The judges were asking for the capitalized version, but students didn’t know unless they asked for the definition.
Kuuvak was the word that brought the Iñupiaq competition to a close. Fifth grader Kopeck Kaitlyn Alston from Brevig Mission placed first."...
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