On Thursday night (26th May, 2016), 13-year-old
Jairam Hathwar and 11-year-old Nihar Janga were declared co-winners of the
Scripps National Spelling Bee, making this the ninth bee in a row to name an
Indian-American victor. In honor of their victory, Slate revisits Ben Paynter’s
story, originally published in 2010, which explains Indian-Americans’ prowess
in spelling competitions. It is reprinted below.
This April's North South Foundation
bee in Shawnee, Kan., might seem like an obscure place to find the spelling
world's two biggest stars. Mostly, it looked like the sort of geeky local bee I
might have attended as a kid—except everyone there was Indian. Inside Shawnee's
Hindu Temple and Cultural Center, 23 awkward kids took turns passing a
microphone back and forth in a hushed beige auditorium. No spotlights, no
podium, just cringe-inducing feedback on the P.A. system. And for the record,
the spelling was a-t-r-o-c-i-o-u-s. Just three of the first 10 contestants
spelled their words correctly. At one point, a poor kid paced in circles and
clutched his crotch before misspelling beleaguered and sprinting off to the
restroom.
Amid it all, 13-year-old Kavya
Shivashankar pronounced words from a fold-out judging table as her father,
Mirle, emceed in a sharp dark suit. Kavya, the 2009 Scripps National Spelling
Bee champion, is a spelling superstar complete with signature move: She
air-writes each word across her palm before speaking it. Kavya and Mirle—her
innovative, ever-enthusiastic coach—were at the small-time competition to pay
homage. Over the past two decades, tournaments like this one—a regional
qualifier for the North South Foundation's spelling league—have become a
breeding ground for Scripps contenders. These minor-league competitions help
kids as young as 6 years old work out the spelling kinks at an early age. The
result has been an Indian-American dynasty at the National Spelling Bee.
Consider the facts:
Indian-Americans make up about 1 percent of the U.S. population; this year, an
estimated 30 NSF-ers will compete at Scripps, 11 percent of the 273-kid field.
Recent winners include Sai R. Gunturi from Dallas, who nonchalantly reassembled
pococurante for a national title in 2003. Sameer Mishra from West Lafayette,
Ind., nailed guerdon in 2008. And four-time finalist Shivashankar made it
back-to-back titles for North South Foundation competitors last year,
air-writing Laodicean for the win. If Shivashankar hadn't come through, it's
possible another North South graduate would have: Four other NSF kids cracked
the top 10 behind her.
The NSF circuit consists of 75
chapters run by close to 1,000 volunteers. The competitions, which began in 1993,
function as a nerd Olympiad for Indian-Americans—there are separate divisions
for math, science, vocab, geography, essay writing, and even public
speaking—and a way to raise money for college scholarships for underprivileged
students in India. There is little financial reward for winners (just a few
thousand dollars in college scholarships) compared with the $40,000 winning
purse handed out each year by Scripps. Still, more than 3,000 kids participated
in NSF's spelling events this year due in part to what NSF founder Ratnam
Chitturi calls a sort of Kavya Effect. "Most American kids look up to
sports figures," he says. "Indian kids are more interested in
education, and they finally have a role model."
Just as Kavya Shivashankar has
inspired the next wave of Indian spellers, Kavya found her bee mojo during the
post- Spellbound boom. Before Spellbound, the 2002 documentary that featured
Indian-American Nupur Lala's run to the 1999 Scripps title, many
first-generation South Asian parents saw NSF as a way for their children to
assimilate—the best way to understand a culture, after all, is to learn its
language. They used the North South Foundation events as a sort of SAT prep,
teaching their children to use phonetics, etymology, and word roots to suss out
answers. "Our focus is not on competition," says Chitturi.
"Winning becomes an outcome of you focusing on learning. You are competing
against yourself, not these other people."
After Spellbound, that changed
a bit. After Balu Natarajan (winning word: milieu) became the first
Indian-American to win Scripps back in 1985, he went on to a career in sports
medicine. When Lala did it in 1999 with logorrhea, she became a movie star.
(OK, a movie star and a neuroscientist.) Kavya has called Lala an
inspiration—the license plate of Mirle's teal minivan reads "SPL
BND." She's far from alone. In 2002, NSF had less than 20 chapters pulling
in about 500 mostly middle-school-age spellers. Then pop culture galvanized an
expansion to elementary schoolers; today, six times as many students compete in
North South Foundation spelling events. "The parents were just
excited," Chitturi says. "They saw that it was a possibility [to win
the National Spelling Bee]."
It's no coincidence, then, that
in the last decade North South Foundation has transformed from an SAT prep
course into a training ground for Scripps. It wasn't too long ago that NSF
standouts like Kamran Riaz and 2000 champion Ashley Thakur didn't compete at
the National Spelling Bee. Riaz, for one, remembers NSF as a nice "alternative"
to Scripps. Thakur's thoughts on the National Spelling Bee: "Not to brag,
but I don't think it would be a hard cake to cut," she once bragged to the
Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
It's not quite right to say
that Riaz and Thakur didn't go to nationals because they didn't think it was a
big deal. The more significant reason is that they simply weren't eligible. You
have to be more than a great speller to qualify for the National Bee—you also
have to live in a school district with a sponsoring newspaper or community
organization. These days, parents seem to be paying a lot more attention to
such logistics. When Mirle Shivashankar realized in 2005 that there was just
one Scripps sponsor in all of Kansas, he beat the bushes to ensure that more
kids from the state—his daughter, for one—would have the chance to go to
nationals. Kavya subsequently gained all of her berths to the nationals by
virtue of a brand-new sponsor, the Olathe News.
The North South Foundation
could dominate Scripps even further, if more of its spellers were eligible to
compete. In areas with more gifted NSFers than competition zones, the battle to
get into Scripps can be intense. Whereas regional North South Foundation
competitions are run like standardized tests—the best scores get weighted
against a national average to determine the national finalists—Scripps operates
more like a crazy single-elimination tournament. The winner in each local
bracket funnels into a pool of finalists, who repeat the same process to pick a
winner. That can lead to some powerhouse regional showdowns. In San Jose,
Calif., for instance, eventual 2009 NSF senior co-champion Ramya Auroprem had
to beat out 2009 NSF runner-up Sidarth Jayadev just to make it into last year's
National Spelling Bee finals.
North South Foundation winners
don't have to worry about Kavya Shivashankar anymore—she has retired. At the
Shawnee NSF contest this April, Swetha Jasti placed first, with a perfect score
that qualified her for NSF nationals later this summer. But unfortunately for
Jasti, she won't make it to Scripps this year. When the National Spelling Bee
starts up this week, their region will be represented by a surprise challenger:
Kavya's 8-year-old sister, Vanya, who drubbed Jasti in the National Spelling
Bee's Olathe qualifier.
For youngsters like Vanya, this
is Scripps' best selling point: Whereas the North South Foundation still
divides contestants into junior and senior levels, the National Spelling Bee
has no minimum age requirement. Vanya, who has taken to referring to herself
and her sister as the Eli and Peyton Manning of spelling, will be the youngest
competitor in Washington, D.C., this year. When ESPN recently showed up in
Kansas to film a miniprofile for the contest, she grinned unabashedly.
"Now it's my turn," she proclaimed to the room full of cameras. As
with most things in the life of an NSF standout, the moment seemed
well-rehearsed.
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