Zaila Avant-garde, 14, makes history at National Spelling Bee
Ask students: Who is Zaila Avant-garde? Why is Avant-garde’s victory historically significant? When did Avant-garde begin her competitive spelling career?
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July 19, 2021
Ask students: Who is Zaila Avant-garde? Why is Avant-garde’s victory historically significant? When did Avant-garde begin her competitive spelling career?
Share
Zaila Avant-garde of New Orleans, Louisiana, made history on July 8 as the first African American student to win the Scripps National Spelling Bee. The word she spelled correctly to win was “Murraya,” which is a genus of tropical Asiatic and Australian trees. Her victory during the final round also means she is the first Black champion since Jody-Anne Maxwell in 1998. Avant-garde holds three Guinness World Records for her skill dribbling multiple basketballs at the same time and hopes to one day play in the WNBA. In addition to the title, Avant-garde takes home $50,000 in prize money. Watch the video and answer the discussion questions below. To read the transcript of the video, click here.
Warm up questions: Have your students identify the 5Ws and an H:
Focus question: What positive influence might Avant-garde, 14, inspire for other young students through her spelling bee victory and impressive basketball career?
Media literacy: What emotions did you feel as you watched the spelling bee clip, from the word being pronounced to Avant-garde spelling it correctly, to the victor receiving her trophy?
This Daily News Lesson was written by EXTRA intern Jacqueline Kim and EXTRA’s Victoria Pasquantonio. Kim is a junior at Amherst College.
Republished with permission from PBS NewsHour Extra.