National Geographic Bee: The Youngest Finalist!

The ten National Geographic Bee finalists range in age from 10 to 14, and I was able to chat with the youngest competitor, ten-year-old Benjamin Taylor, soon after he learned that he’d be moving on to tomorrow’s championship round. Here he is just moments after the anouncement, smiling with his proud dad.

Ben is a vibrant and enthusiastic kid from West Virginia, who is proud of the fact that he is home-schooled. He’s a 5th-grader representing the Monongalia Homeschoolers Association in Morgantown. He told me that he studied over 70 hours to prepare for the National Bee, and that it was definitely a different experience than the state competition back home in West Virginia. He answered eight questions correctly in this morning’s preliminary round. The only one he missed was the analogy question.

I met with Ben, his dad John, mom Grace and younger brother Joseph, who said he did not help Ben study for the competition. Ben is a Cub Scout who plays piano and enjoys sports. He said in his event bio that he admires Al Gore for his work on global warming and Frank Lloyd Wright for his architecture. He’d like to visit Japan and I asked him about this.

Ben had studied quite a bit about Shikoku, the smallest of the four big islands of Japan. “I haven’t even left the country yet,” he told me, “…but I really like Shikoku because it is lush and green.” I asked Ben if he though his first trip overseas would be to visit this beautiful island and as he shrugged, mom chimed in, “No, it will probably be something like Niagara Falls in Canada!” A little closer to home, but another beautiful spot that I’m sure Ben could find on a map in no time!

We’ll be sure to keep our eye on this cheerful and environmentally conscious competitor during tomorrow’s final. Good luck Ben!

National Geographic Bee: Preliminary Round in Pictures

When I arrived at the Doubletree Crystal City in Arlington, VA this morning, the place was buzzing with world chatter. I overheard conversations about official languages and state capitals as parents and Bee competitors fueled up over breakfast.

As mentioned yesterday, the 55 competitors (ages 10-14) have won school and state championships to qualify for this national final. They are a talented group of students with interests that reach far beyond geography — they are musicians, athletes, Boy & Girl Scouts, artists, writers and video game champs. They admire the Dalai Lama, Jane Goodall, Al Gore, Ben Franklin and evolutionary biologist Jared Diamond.

According to their event bios, some of these savvy students have visited Istanbul, Paris, China, the Galapagos, Mexico, Bahamas, Nova Scotia, Pompeii, Japan, Iceland, Zion and Yellowstone National Parks. And they aspire to visit places like Dubai, Dublin, Polynesia, Belize, New Zealand and Egypt. But they were here today because they know a lot more about tons of places they have never been to.

Here’s a photo recap from the morning’s events:

The preliminary round goes like this: The participants are randomly broken into five groups that compete simultaneously in different rooms. Each group competes for ten rounds of questioning — one practice round and nine official rounds. In each of the five rooms where competition takes place, there is a moderator (who asks the questions), a scorekeeper, timekeeper and judge. The room I sat in on was moderated by Robert Dulli, Deputy to the Chairman at National Geographic. Here he is (on the right) with the official judge for this group, Scott Zillmer of XNR Productions, a custom cartography company:

The ten rounds of competition are broken down into different categories. The practice round was a mix of general geography questions, and was the only round in which the participants could choose between two possible answers. The other nine questions were grouped around specific topics: World Geography, Analogies, Physical Land Form Terms, Governments of the World, National Parks of the World, Political Geography, Current Events, Geography of the Southern Hemisphere and a final round in which the students had to rank three places according to specific characteristics.

Here are a few sample questions, repeated here in abbreviated phrasing. The exact questions to participants were slightly longer than this. I’ll leave you hanging without answers, maybe you know them…and if not, Google can help…

Saba, a state on the island of Borneo, belongs to which country?

Bordeaux is to Aquitaine as Dresden is to what?
(Only two of the 11 kids in my group got the analogy questions right, they seemed particularly challenging.)

What is the term for mid-latitude grasslands in Inner Mongolia?
(The land forms category included slide photos like this:)

And the current events questions involved use of a map with numbered countries. Students had to name the country and corresponding number on the map, Questions covered news as varied as the January 2007 US embassy attack in Greece and a February 2007 controversy over smoked cheese between Slovakia and Poland.

After the first four rounds of questioning, two contestants in the group I was observing, Ben Geyer and Michael Ling, both had perfect scores. The pink dots next to the contestants names indicate the two questions they may ask during the competition. They are only allowed two chances to ask for a question to be repeated or for a word to be spelled:

The final round of questions asked participants to rank three countries based on a specific characteristic such as literacy rate, population growth, date of independence, land area, average rainfall or distance from the Tropic of Cancer. Most of these were answered quickly and correctly…these kids know their geo stats!

When the final round had been completed, these were the scores for this group:

The Bens seemed to have it — and just happened to be seated next to each other too!

But we were asked to stay put in the room until the scores in all five rooms could be tabulated to see if a tie-breaker was necessary. I was sure that would be the case, but for the first time in the history of the competition, there was no need — exactly ten participants had overall scores of 8 and 9, so there was no need to go further.

The ten finalists were announced in the grand ballroom:

Tomorrow’s final will be moderated by Jeopardy’s Alex Trebek. I hope to be able to bring you news about the winner as soon as it happens. There will be more about the quiz questions and other interesting things about the National Geographic Society and the Bee to come later this week. And I’ve got a short interview with one of the finalists coming up in a bit.

National Geographic Bee: Live Blogging the Bee


For the first time in the 19 year history of the National Geographic Bee, there is no tie-breaker at the end of the preliminary rounds to determine the top ten finalists. Here is the list of winning finalists, mostly 7th and 8th graders:

Andrew Lee, Alaska
Antonio de la Pena, Colorado
Ben Geyer, D.C. (this is Ben’s third time competing in the Bee)
Suneil Iyer, Kansas
Solly Mayer, Kentucky
Tyler Bowen, Oklahoma
Francisco Vargas, Puerto Rico
Mark Arildsen, Tennessee
Caitlin Snaring, Washington (the only girl to make the final)
Ben Taylor, West Virginia (Ben is a 10 year old 5th grader!)

A full recap with quiz questions and photos to follow later today.

Back to the Bee…

National Geographic Bee: Let’s Talk Location

As travelers, we often become intimately connected to the places we visit. But what about the locations we only read about in stories or hear about on the news? How much do we know about these places? And maybe more importantly at times, do we even know where they ARE?

World Hum recently pointed to an essay by the always insightful Thomas Swick about this wonderful world of ours that we know so little about. With the world at our fingertips these days, it’s easy to get by without actually knowing where places are physically located. The web keeps us all connected, educating us about different cultures and countries through a variety of interactive methods. But the context of physical location can often be overlooked as we build relationships across borders that we might not be able to identify on a map.

Personally, I’m utterly jealous of the “savants” Swick refers to — those that can “name capitals, rivers, and seas the way some people rattle off movie titles.” I get so frustrated when watching Jeopardy and I can’t come up with even one of the questions for the “African Capitals” or “European Rivers” categories!

This week I may get a chance to meet some of these geography wizards…AND maybe even tell Alex Trebek how distressed I am about my own geographic illiteracy. Tomorrow and Wednesday I’ll be attending the National Geographic Bee in VA and DC, the final round of which is moderated by Mr. Daily Double himself.

The 19th annual Bee kicks off tomorrow with preliminary competition. Fifty-five super smart fifth- to eighth-graders (ages 10 to 14) will compete over two days for a sweet top prize — a $25,000 college scholarship and lifetime membership in the National Geographic Society. Second and third prizes are college scholarships of $15,000 and $10,000.

These 55 finalists have made it past high school and state-level competitions across the country in which nearly 5 million students participated. They represent the 50 states, District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, U.S. Virgin Islands, Pacific Territories and Department of Defense Dependents Schools.

Updates from the competition — as well as super-tough geography quiz questions — will follow throughout the week, so start studying now! The GeoBee Challenge is a good place to begin. Another fun one is GeoSpy. I got the continents assigned correctly in no time, but locating 53 African countries in 180 seconds!!!?!?! Yeah right.

Last year’s Bee winner, Bonny Jain, an 8th grader from Illinois, answered this question correctly to win the competition:

Name the mountains that extend across much of Wales, from the Irish Sea to the Bristol Channel.

I’ll add the answer in the comments a little bit later on. But see if you can guess first — without Googling!!!