ADVT:

  Home   Astrology   Business   Indiafocus   Lifestyle   Movies   News   Parenting   Online Exam   Sports   Travel

News HomeWorldAmerica
Indian-American kid spells history
Friday, May 30, 2008 09:10 [IST]

Washington: Sriram Hathwar, an 8-year-old Indian-American boy, has become the youngest speller in the history of the Scripps National Spelling Bee even as he could not go too far in the popular contest.

But nine other of the 30 Indian-American participants made it to the semi finals of the 83-year-old competition on Thursday by spelling words like "leptocercal", "bizarrerie" and "trochophore".

Indian kids have dominated the event in recent years, winning the championship five times in the last nine years. The last Indian winner was Anurag Kashyap in 2005 correctly spelling "appoggiatura".

The nine Indian kids among 45 Spellers advancing to the Semi finals were:  Easun Arunachalam (steeve), Arushi Jauhari (leptocercal), Shiva Kangeyan (ozostomia), Vaibhav Vavilala (luftmensch), Sameer Mishra (quadrat), Kavya Shivashankar (bizarrerie), Akshat Shekhar (monophthalmic), Sidharth Chand (purslane) and Jahnavi Iyer (trochophore).

In all, 288 children in the 8-15 age group from across the US, Canada and eight other countries qualified for the grueling two-day competition, but only 63 made it to the quarter finals.

In the preliminary rounds on Thursday, Sriram quickly nailed the word judges gave him, barely pausing between letters. "Elicitation," said Sriram, making sure to pronounce the word correctly. "E-l-i-c-i-t-a-t-i-o-n."

The crowd cheered perhaps just a touch louder for the pint-size speller, and he slinked back to his seat on stage, disappearing behind the taller contestants sitting in front of him.

Despite his correct spelling of a word trickier than many of the others given - "rigatoni" and "macaroon" for example - Sriram was barred from moving on to the bee's quarterfinals because of his score on a written spelling test administered earlier this week.

Surrounded by both disappointed, disqualified spellers and those eager to get back on the stage for the next round, the second-grader stoically left the ballroom where the bee was held.

"I am ready to get it over with," Sriram told Abcnews.com the night before his turn in front of the judges, smiling from behind his thick-rimmed glasses, pausing only to share some of his favourite words and then, of course, to spell them out loud.

Sriram was 7 years old when he secured a place in this competition after nailing the spelling of "impervious" in a regional bee near his hometown of Pointed Post, New York.

He began playing with words when he was a toddler, according to his mother. She practices internal medicine when she's not working as her son's spelling coach.

"When (Sriram) was about 4-years-old, he was still in preschool and his teachers would come and tell me that he could read and write really well," said Roopa Hathwar, adding that she is often more nervous before bees than her son. "They would go to him to clarify spelling and he became the spell check for the class."

Sriram soon became obsessed with words - playing Scrabble, constructing his own crossword puzzles and constantly asking his parents how to spell things he saw around him.

Sriram loves to spell, but he likes other things, too: baseball, piano and geography. "Maybe next time I'll try a geography bee," said Sriram. He was excited when he was once asked to spell "schuss" at a previous bee because of his other hobby: downhill skiing. "It means skiing in German," he clarified, adjusting his blue speller's ribbon pinned to his shirt.

As for other young spellers hoping to follow his lead, Sriram has some advice. "Don't be nervous and it's okay if you get a word wrong," he said. "Just keep trying."


Source : IANS

Add To

digg.com

del.icio.us

stumbleupon.com

My Yahoo

reditt.com

newsvine.com

fark.com
 Post Your Feedback   
Name
Email ID
Comments
 Other Features
News today
Screen Sever
Gallery
WallPaper
Print this page
Mail this page
Archives


  
More News
One year since 26/11 the agony...
India unsatisfied with status...
Vajpayee was not investigated,...
FICCI signs agreements with...
Eunuchs too have a right to...
Manmohan Singh asks Pakistan...
Flag march to remember 26/11...
Pregnant woman paraded naked,...
Mamta defends hefty salaries
A rare love story!
Lok Sabha adjourned over...
Liberhan report in this...
China coal mine blast: 104...
China mine blast death toll 104
Govt to help obese woman in...
Red alert at Guj Kandla oil...
Three Mile Island Nuke plant...
Who should I deal with in Pak?:...
LeT's Google Earth link to...
Who should I deal with in Pak?:...
Four held for misbehaving with...