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91桃色 Student Reflects on Childhood Geography Bee Wins

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Alyssa Hurst

Isabella Contolini won the Colorado Geography Bee twice as a child, securing a full scholarship to 91桃色

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Contolini
Contolini at the National Geographic Geography Bee in Washington, D.C.

Whenever Isabella Contolini crossed paths with a new geography puzzle, she鈥檇 write it down in her notebook. In what country is the port of Basra? How do you pronounce Kiribati? Where do kiwi birds live?

It started with the movie 鈥淎keelah and the Bee,鈥 about a young girl taking on the national听spelling competition. While poring over the dictionary bored Contolini, she had always felt at home exploring maps and so set her sights on the National Geographic Geography Bee.

鈥淚鈥檝e had a fascination with maps since I was really little, and learning more about the wide world I can鈥檛 see. My dad is from Italy and my youngest brother is adopted from Guatemala,鈥 says Contolini, now a 91桃色 student majoring in biological sciences with minors in chemistry and geography. 鈥淚 enjoyed learning the names of new places and strange words and funny, crazy things that are out there in the world.鈥

By fourth grade, she was competing in the Colorado State GeoBee hosted annually at the 91桃色, where the grand prize was a half scholarship to 91桃色. 鈥淭he girl who won that year, it was her second year winning, so she got the full scholarship,鈥 Contolini recalls. 鈥淚 was like, 鈥楢ll right, this is my goal. I鈥檓 going to win this.鈥欌

And she did. Twice. In both sixth and seventh grades, Contolini won the state geography bee, securing a full scholarship to 91桃色. From there, she made her way to Washington, D.C., for the national competition, where she took 13th place her first year and 11th her second.

鈥淚t was a dream come true,鈥 she says. 鈥淲hen all of my friends were applying to colleges and stressing out, it was never something I had to think about. In high school, it allowed me some time to just be a normal teenager, and now that I鈥檓 in college, to graduate debt-free is going to be a huge deal.鈥

Contolini dad
Contolini and her father

Beyond the scholarship, and learning that the English language name for Rapa Nui is Easter Island, Contolini says the competition fostered a stronger relationship with her father and her faith. 鈥淒oing the bee together really cemented our relationship. When this was something I started to get excited about, [my dad] saw it as an opportunity to spend time together and do something we both really enjoy,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e integrated our faith a lot. We are Catholic 鈥 and we decided to start every study session with a prayer. We were looking at the bigger picture.鈥

And the bee fostered a love of traveling. In fact, Contolini takes a keepsake 鈥 a rock鈥 from each place she visits and asks her friends to do the same. 鈥淚 have one from the top of Mount Fuji in Japan; I have one from Antarctica; I have one from Bali in Indonesia; I have one from Mauritius,鈥 she says. 鈥淲hen I get them from the really obscure places, that鈥檚 really exciting.鈥

Contolini collected her latest stowaways on a beach in Elgin, a coastal city in northern Scotland while studying abroad in Glasgow. Instead of carefully cataloging and labeling them with the rest of her collection, she keeps them close by. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e been sitting in my pencil box, and it makes me happy to see them,鈥 she says.

The rocks keep her motivated as she wades through biology coursework. While she considered majoring in geography, she ultimately chose a path to medicine. After graduating in 2020, she plans to take a gap year before continuing to medical school.

Even as she is future-focused, Contolini enjoys a look back. Each March, she volunteers at the state GeoBee, paying special attention to the few female participants. 鈥淭hose days were fun, but also very intense and nerve-wracking. Now being on the other side of it, I feel like I鈥檓 able to give back a little bit,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he first year I went to nationals, I was the only girl out of all 54 of us. 鈥 So seeing the few girls at the bee, I鈥檓 always rooting for them.鈥

As she moves through her education and continues to travel (next stop: perhaps a jaunt to New Zealand to hang out with some kiwi birds) she says she鈥檒l never lose sight of the importance of geography. 鈥淭here鈥檚 such a lack of knowledge about the world,鈥 Contolini says. 鈥淲e tend to live most of our lives in this little bubble of our own neighborhood and our community. There鈥檚 nothing wrong with that, but it鈥檚 important to know we are not the only ones.鈥