Who
said spelling has to be dull? Back with the fifth grade yesterday, I
gave the students their weekly test in the subject: 18 words, all ending in –able
(lovable, likable, usable, etc.), plus three complete sentences, each with
another –able word. For added fun, there were to be a couple of bonus words.
Before
administering the test, I told the class about my own spellbinding misadventure.
Back when I was in the fifth grade, I won a class spelling bee. Any small pride I took in the accomplishment immediately vanished when I learned that my reward was to be entry in a broader community contest at a local VFW post. That second spelling bee required wearing a jacket and tie, and on a Sunday afternoon!
Fast
forward to the big day. Peevish about being forced to surrender my free time on
the weekend and nervous about the competition, I lined up on the stage with the
other children. Here came my first word: “desert.” The spelling bee’s administrator put it in a
sentence: “The desert is a large, dry area of land.”
“Desert,”
I repeated. “D-E-S-S-E-R-T. Desert.”
Boing!
The rude buzzer loudly proclaimed an incorrect response. Banished from the
stage, I had to join the audience of proud parents through the interminable elimination
rounds. Speeches praising the winner followed, along with photos of all of the contestants.
I
never misspelled that word again, I told the class.
“But
how can we remember “desert” and “dessert?” asked Kyle.
You
always want a double helping of dessert, I told him, echoing the hint I received too late to be of use to me when I most needed it.
O.K.,
it was time for their test now. I dictated the 18 words and three sentences. Then,
to enliven an expanded bonus round, I asked for volunteers. One-by-one, five different
students came to the front of the classroom. While I held an oversized children’s
dictionary, each student in turn, with eyes closed, opened the dictionary and
blindly pointed to a spot on the page.
The
first bonus word is “eclipse,” I announced.
And
so on for several additional words—“planet,” “counter,” “undertone,” and “practice”—stopping twice to veto words I thought too easy for fifth graders: “candy”
and “oven.”
“Let’s
keep going,” said the class. There was time for just one more—a super bonus
word. I would choose. Can you guess the word?
The
super bonus word is “dessert,” I said.
All
but one student spelled it correctly.