Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

National Spelling Bee Becoming Easier To Predict

The Canadian Press, 29 May, 2017 12:10 PM
  • National Spelling Bee Becoming Easier To Predict
WASHINGTON — To the fans watching on ESPN, Nihar Janga's win last year in the Scripps National Spelling Bee was a shock: He was only 11 years old, a fifth-grader appearing in the bee for the first time, competing against 8th-graders with deep voices and facial hair.
 
To the tightknit community of spellers and ex-spellers who track performances leading up to the bee, Nihar was something else: a seasoned competitor with an impressive resume and a threat to win it all.
 
As the bee has become increasingly difficult, spellers are less likely to come out of nowhere and hoist the trophy. There's more information available about kids in the bee, and champion spellers have increasingly fit a familiar profile. For them, the bee is an all-consuming, year-round pursuit.
 
"There's definitely an established set of favourites, and as you have more well-known spelling bees to compete in, you have more barometers of how well people are going to do," said Mitchell Robson, 15, who finished 7th in last year's bee. "There's usually one or two people you see coming out of nowhere every year, but it's definitely very difficult to have more than that. ... Last year, Nihar Janga definitely did not come of nowhere."
 
Nihar was considered a dangerous speller because, the previous summer, he had finished second in the North South Foundation spelling bee. The non-profit foundation hosts national competitions for Indian-Americans in a variety of academic fields. The last 10 National Spelling Bee winners have participated in the foundation's spelling bee, and 17 of the past 21 champions have been Indian-American. Also, three of the nine kids who've won the South Asian Spelling Bee have gone on to win the Scripps bee.
 
The last dark horse to win was Ansun Sujoe, a co-champion in 2014, the first of three straight years during which the bee ended in a tie. His results in the North South Foundation weren't impressive, and he didn't make it past the preliminary rounds in his prior National Spelling Bee appearance.
 
Two years ago, Vanya Shivashankar and Gokul Venkatachalam easily withstood the pressure of being labeled co-favourites and shared the title. And last year, Nihar was co-champion with Jairam Hathwar, a polished speller whose older brother shared the title with Ansun in 2014.
 
 
Things were different a generation ago, before the internet and before the creation of the North South Foundation and South Asian bees. Lekshmi Nair, who participated in the bee from 1988-1990, said she showed up knowing next to nothing about her fellow spellers.
 
"There wasn't this pipeline or anything like that. Really, it was anyone's guess what could happen," said Nair, whose 13-year-old daughter, Mira Dedhia, is making her second appearance in the bee this year. "My final year there it was a girl who, it was her first time in the nationals. No one had heard of her prior to that. That was maybe a time when it was more like anyone's game."
 
Now, ex-spellers who remain close to the bee swap lists of favourites and participate in fantasy leagues. They share news about the words used in regional bees and pay close attention to parts of the country that are known to be competitive, like Florida, California, New York and Texas. Some work as pronouncers or bee judges, attend the minor-league bees as fans or watch them on livestreams.
 
For this year's bee, which starts Tuesday, three spellers are consensus favourites: Shourav Dasari, a past North South Foundation and South Asian Spelling Bee champion whose older sister came close several times; Siyona Mishra, who won last year's South Asian bee and finished 9th in her only National Spelling Bee appearance; and Tejas Muthusamy, who's making his fourth appearance, with two previous top-10 finishes.
 
Even if one of the favourites ends up winning, the bee still has plenty of surprises. Last year, Shourav was also highly touted, but he misspelled a word and fell just short of the prime-time finals.
 
"In almost every bee there's a kid or a handful of kids that there's a lot of chatter about because they've done well previously," said Paige Kimble, the bee's executive director. "And almost every bee there's a shock moment that comes when those kids who were the subject of a lot of chatter meet the word they didn't know."
 
Siyona said in an interview that she doesn't feel any additional pressure from being considered a favourite. But she knows her experience is an advantage.
 
"Participating in the South Asian Spelling Bee helps you prepare for spelling on stage and figuring out words you've never seen before," Siyona said.
 
No matter how much success they've had ahead of the bee, elite spellers also have to show a single-minded commitment, putting in the thousands of hours of practice required to be able to spell hundreds of thousands of words. Not all of the 291 spellers in the bee are that dedicated.
 
Nair has been quizzing her daughter, Mira, at least 2 hours a night, and more on weekends, since last year's bee. Mira fell just short of advancing from the preliminary rounds last year and wants to improve on that. She's going all-out because she's in 8th grade and it's her final year of eligibility.
 
 
"It would be very hard to do for three, four years in a row. I would have a hard time with that," said Nair, a radiologist who also has a 2-year-old daughter. "It's been very exhausting."

MORE Interesting ARTICLES

This Zero-star Swiss Hotel is Just a Bed on a Mountain

This Zero-star Swiss Hotel is Just a Bed on a Mountain
Located 6,463 feet above sea level in the middle of the Swiss Alps, the Null Stern concept hotel takes the minimalist approach to the extreme, removing the walls, roof, basic amenities like toilets and leaving guests with just a king-size bed and a stunning 360-degree view to admire.

This Zero-star Swiss Hotel is Just a Bed on a Mountain

Meet The $99 Doll That Parents Are Desperate To Buy

Meet The $99 Doll That Parents Are Desperate To Buy
One of these sold-out toys actually went for as much as 350 dollars on eBay, while thousands of parents are on a waiting list

Meet The $99 Doll That Parents Are Desperate To Buy

Watch: Indian Girl Who Sneezes 8,000 Times a Day Leaves Doctors Baffled

Watch: Indian Girl Who Sneezes 8,000 Times a Day Leaves Doctors Baffled
Her mother is desperate to help, but doctors aren't even sure what is causing the unusual sneezing bouts.

Watch: Indian Girl Who Sneezes 8,000 Times a Day Leaves Doctors Baffled

Financial Times' Story On Qatari Princess' Orgy With 7 Men In London Disappears From Website

Financial Times' Story On Qatari Princess' Orgy With 7 Men In London Disappears From Website
An alleged scandal about Qatari princess which Financial Times, a British publication  reported has been termed 'fake'. 

Financial Times' Story On Qatari Princess' Orgy With 7 Men In London Disappears From Website

The NoPhone Air - Plastic Phone Packaging with Nothing but Air Inside

The NoPhone Air - Plastic Phone Packaging with Nothing but Air Inside
"We took away the headphone jack. And then we took away everything else. It may look like nothing is in this packaging. But that's what's so beautiful about it."

The NoPhone Air - Plastic Phone Packaging with Nothing but Air Inside

Women Get More Adventurous At Sex In Midlife

Women Get More Adventurous At Sex In Midlife
The findings are based on a study by University of Pittsburgh researchers who spoke to 39 women about how their sex lives changed with age, Daily Mail reported on Thursday.

Women Get More Adventurous At Sex In Midlife