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South Asian Spelling Bee

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South Asian Spelling Bee
GenreSpelling bee
FrequencyAnnual (mid August)
Location(s)New Brunswick, NJ
Inaugurated2008
Patron(s)Touchdown Media
Websitewww.southasianspellingbee.com

The South Asian Spelling Bee is an annual spelling bee platform in the United States for children of South Asian descent. It is an annual contest that tours the country each June and July in pursuit of the top two spellers from formerly as many as 12, but currently 5 cities nationwide. Since 2018, it also features a program similar to the Scripps National Spelling Bee's RSVBee, in which wild-card spellers can apply to compete at nationals. The competition is open to any student at or below the age of 14, who has at least one parent or grandparent who is of South Asian descent, or whose lineage can be traced to Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan, and/or Sri Lanka.[1] Since its launch in 2008, the South Asian Spelling Bee has been aired in over 120 countries on Sony Entertainment Television Asia as a multi-part series.

Competition

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Regional competitions are held in major South Asian American hubs across the United States. As of 2017, the bee visited the San Francisco Bay Area, Dallas, Chicago, Seattle, Charlotte, NC, New Jersey, the Washington Metropolitan Area, and Boston. In 2019, however, the only remaining regionals are Bay Area, Dallas, Charlotte, DC Metro, and New Jersey. Spellers are enrolled by a parent or guardian to participate in any one regional contest. The top three spellers from each regional contest are awarded cash prizes. The winner and first runner-up in each of the regional contests are invited to participate in the national final, which takes place each August at or near Rutgers University in Piscataway, New Jersey. The national champion is awarded a $3,000 grand prize scholarship presented by the title sponsor.

Media coverage

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The South Asian Spelling Bee is featured across an array of South Asians-focused as well as mainstream media outlets. Produced for broadcast on Sony Entertainment Television Asia, the regional contests and finals are aired worldwide each year. Many South Asian-focused newspapers, feature coverage of the bee each season, from the season launch through the national finals. In light of the successes of South Asian-American students when it comes to spelling contests, the South Asian Spelling Bee has gained recognition for its role in promoting academic talent. In 2008, the Bee was noted by BBC News.[2] as an emerging platform geared specifically towards this audience In 2010, the South Asian Spelling Bee was recognized by the Wall Street Journal .[3] as a leading academic contest for South Asian-American youth.

Previous National Champions (since 2011)

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In 2011, Narahari Bharadwaj of Plano, Texas won the bee on the word "schindylesis." Bharadwaj placed 14th in the 2011 Scripps National Spelling Bee. Syamantak Payra of Clear Creek, TX was crowned the 2012 champion on the word "dghaisa." Payra went on to the place 7th and 37th in the 2013 and 2014 Scripps National Spelling Bee(s), respectively. Sriram Hathwar of Painted Post, NY, won the 2013 bee on "phorminx." Sriram has done well in Scripps as well, placing 6th in 2011, 3rd in 2013, and becoming co-champion of the 2014 Scripps National Spelling Bee (along with Ansun Sujoe).[4] They were the first co-champs in 52 years. Sriram also competed at Scripps in 2008 (as a second grader) and 2009. In 2014, Gokul Venkatachalam from Chesterfield, Missouri won on the word "becquerel"; he placed 3rd at Scripps earlier that year and tied for 1st place at the 2015 Scripps National Spelling Bee, which saw co-champions for the second year in a row. Vanya Shivashankar of Olathe, Kansas, the other champion, tied for runner up at SASB behind Gokul in 2014.[5] 6th grader Shourav Dasari from Spring, Texas was the champion in 2015 with the winning word "psocoptera" (he went on to win the North South Foundation Senior Spelling Bee in the same year).[6][7] Shourav was runner-up in 2013 alongside his sister Shobha, whom he credited as his inspiration and the reason he started spelling bees. In 2016, the largest year for South Asian Spelling Bee nationals to date with 26 spellers, including most of the greatest of the time, Siyona Mishra of Orlando, Florida, who had previously placed 9th in Scripps, was the champion on "zubrowka". 2017 saw the first reduction in scope, to 8 regionals, and also experienced a drop-out epidemic, with many regional champions and runners-up not attending nationals; however, the strongest contenders came, and Sravanth Malla of Haverstraw, New York won on "chytridiales"; he finished 6th in the 2018 Scripps National Spelling Bee. 2018 reduced to 6 regionals, the current five plus Chicago, and added 12 wild-card participants as well, many of whom did extremely well. Sohum Sukhatankar of Dallas became the first speller ever to win the South Asian Spelling Bee in their first-ever appearance, taking the title with "dasyuridae". He went on to become one of the "octochamps" of the 2019 Scripps National Spelling Bee. The 2019 South Asian Spelling Bee champion, Navneeth Murali, took the first ever appeal win on the word “flype”. Though he initially spelled the word as “flipe”, it was accepted after some deliberation due to the fact that flipe is actually a separately listed variant of flype. Navneeth went on to win the 2020 SpellPundit Online Spelling Bee, and also won many other major spelling bees, such as the North South Foundation Bee and the NASCC competition. The 2020 South Asian Spelling Bee was held online, and was won by Aaron Chang with the word “sigloi”. Aaron was the first champion of the South Asian Spelling Bee who wasn’t of South Asian descent, as well as the first champion never to have won a South Asian Spelling Bee regional.

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References

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  1. ^ "South Asian Spelling Bee". South Asian Spelling Bee. Retrieved March 10, 2012.
  2. ^ "South Asians top US spelling contests". BBC News. June 17, 2008. Retrieved May 3, 2011.
  3. ^ "Winning Bees Spells Glory for Indian Kids on the Ethnic Circuit". The Wall Street Journal. July 14, 2010. Retrieved February 8, 2011.
  4. ^ "Championship finalists 2014". Scripps National Spelling Bee. E.W. Scripps Company. Retrieved June 11, 2015.
  5. ^ "Championship finalists 2015". Scripps National Spelling Bee. E.W. Scripps Company. Retrieved June 11, 2015.
  6. ^ "2015 National Winner". southasianspellingbee.com. South Asian Spelling Bee. Retrieved August 30, 2015.
  7. ^ "Houston Teen Wins 2015 MetLife South Asian Spelling Bee". India West. India West. August 28, 2015. Retrieved August 30, 2015.
  8. ^ "India the Latest Buzz Word in Legendary American Spelling Contest". VOA.
  9. ^ Williamson, Jacob (May 2, 2019). "Speller Spotlight: The People's Champions". BeeNN.
  10. ^ "7 of the 8 Spelling Bee winners are Indian Americans. Here's why that's not surprising". CNN.