Spelling bee winner says bilingual home honed his skills
CU 51´ŤĂ˝ College of Arts and Sciences supports familyâs travel to national finals
Bao Pham, his parents, Thuy Nguyen and Huy Pham, and his two older brothers, ages 19 and 24, were all born in Vietnam, and came to live in Colorado 10 years ago.
But Bao,Ěý10, is an outlier: Unlike the rest of his family, his first language is English.

Bao Pham.
âI was born in Vietnam and speak Vietnamese, but Iâm not fluent,â says the fifth grader at Broomfieldâs Birch Elementary School. âAt home, my parents talk in Vietnamese and my brothers and I respond in English.â
Bao credits growing up bilingual with helping him to hone his English skills and win the Barnes & Noble 2018 Regional Spelling Bee for Coloradoâs Front Range in February.
âMy parents donât speak English very well, so Iâve mostly learned by myself. That makes me a curious person,â he says. âOf course, I did study for the spelling bee. I practice a lot and try to memorize how to spell words. I try to learn the difference in endings, such as âtion,â âcionâ and âsion.â Iâve also worked on the etymology of languages, since I never know what words are coming at me.â
On Feb. 10 at Nevin Platt Middle School in 51´ŤĂ˝ County, Bao took the prize by correctly spelling âpyroclastic,â after breezing through each succeeding challenge, from âdrumlinâ to âdemocracy.â It was only his third spelling bee.
Baoâs favorite subject in school is math. âIâm pretty profound in it,â he says. Heâs no fan of social studies, and English falls somewhere in the middle. But he does love to read, citing C.S. Lewisâ âChronicles of Narniaâ and âRoom One,â a mystery by Andrew Clements, as a couple of favorites.
Now he will travel to Washington, D.C., with his parents to participate in the at the end of May. The University of Colorado 51´ŤĂ˝ College of Arts and Sciences will pay the familyâs travel expenses.
âThanks to the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Colorado because they give my son the opportunity to travel to Washington, D.C.,â says Nguyen, who with her husband works at Lafayette-based Rocky Mountain Instruments, a manufacturer of precision optical components.
Long interested in aviation, Bao is especially looking forward to visiting the National Air and Space Museum of the Smithsonian Institute when in the nationâs capital.
âIâve thought of being in the aviation industry, but Iâm a bit of a klutz, so I donât know,â he says. âSo, the job Iâm thinking of now is becoming a doctor.â