Sixth-Grader Sweeps Geography
Bee Nationals
Bound By Kim
Centazzo April 11, 2007
Partha Narasimhan
has always had a good sense of direction. And that sense
of direction paid off at a geography bee last
month. The sixth-grader at Mercer Middle School in
Aldie, placed first in the 2007 Virginia Geography Bee
Friday, March 30, at Old Dominion University in Norfolk,
Va. Partha said he studied many different topics:
geography, history and culture with his mother,
Sanghmitra Narasimhan, and other family members, in
preparation for the state bee. He also studied with
social studies teacher, Pamela Dolgin. Dolgin
described Partha as a "highly motivated
student." "Even as young as he is, I would call him a
life-long learner," she said. "He seems to have a
natural desire to learn that is from deep inside, even
at the ripe, old age of 12." Partha attributes his
win to "quite a bit of luck," he said, but his stats
tell a different story. He placed third at the
state-level bee last year as a fifth-grader at
Hutchinson Farm Elementary School. "I’m just plain
good at memorizing," he said.
PARTHA WILL
represent Virginia at the national finals May 22 and May
23, at the National Geographic Society headquarters in
Washington, D.C. He is eligible for a $25,000
scholarship and a round trip ticket. "I’d like to go
to Rome or St. Petersburg," Partha said. The
sixth-grader said he is considering going to Oxford
University, but hasn’t settle on one school yet, because
he has a lot of time. For now, he is busy preparing
for the national bee in the same manner he did for the
state competition, going over maps and books with his
mother and other family members, he said. "And he’s
getting quizzed by me," Dolgin said. He will compete
against 55 students from across the country in grades
five through eight. The majority of students are in the
seventh and eighth grade.
STUDENTS FROM 10
Loudoun County Public Schools, including Sterling,
Belmont Ridge, River Bend, Blue Ridge and Smart’s Mill
middle schools and Newton-Lee and Potowmack elementary
schools, participated in the state bee. Tatiana
Lozano, a seventh-grader at J. Lupton Simpson Middle
School, placed third in the state bee, and Yohan
Sumathipala, a seventh-grader at Farmwell Station Middle
School finished in the top 10. The participants won
their school-level geography bee and took a test to
qualify for the Virginia Geography Bee. The National
Geographic Society invited the students with the top-100
scores to compete at a state-level competition, held in
each of the 50 states and in five U.S.
territories.
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