A team of students representing La Jolla High School recently won highest honors in this year’s WordWright Challenge,
a national competition for high school students requiring close reading
and analysis of many different kinds of prose and poetry. Participating
with 582 school teams from all across the country, the school’s tenth
graders tied for tenth place in the nation in the year’s third meet,
held in February.
Sophomore
Nika Ostovar won highest honors for individual achievement as well,
being one of only 22 tenth graders in the entire country who earned
perfect scores in the meet. Others at the school who excelled included
sophomores Charlie Mann and Michael Penny and junior Erika Wadsworth.
More than 58,000 students from across the U.S. (and from three foreign
nations) participated in the meet. The students were supervised by Jewel
Weien.
The premise behind the WordWright Challenge is that attentive reading
and sensitivity to language are among the most important skills students
acquire in school. The texts students must analyze for the Challenge
can range from short fiction by Eudora Welty or John Steinbeck to poetry
as old as Shakespeare’s or as recent as Margaret Atwood’s, and to
essays as classic as E.B.White’s or as current as a Time opinion piece
by James Poniewozik. Though the texts vary widely in voice, subject,
tone, and length, they have one thing in common: style. All use language
skillfully to convey layers and shades of meaning not always apparent
to students on a first or casual reading.
Like the questions on
the verbal SAT I, the SAT II in English Literature, and the Advanced
Placement exams in both English Language and English Literature, the
questions posed by the WordWright Challenge ask students both to
recognize the emotional and/or rational logic of a piece of writing and
to notice the ways in which a writer’s style shapes and shades his
meaning. Because the WordWright Challenge is a classroom activity and
not a college-entrance exam, however, it can be a learning experience,
not just a high hurdle. After completing a Challenge, classes are
encouraged to talk about the texts and the answers to the
multiple-choice questions, and are also given additional topics for
open-ended discussion and/or written response.
The texts for the third WordWright meet this year were a poem by
Robert Frost for 9th and 10th graders and a prize-winning essay by
Daniel Orozco for 11th and 12th graders. The students will participate
in one more WordWright meet during the coming months, and medals and
certificates will be awarded in June to those who have achieved and/or
progressed the most in the course of the year.