New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Can you spell determinat­ion? He’s back at the Bee for try No. 6

- By Tara Bahrampour

Akash Vukoti was 2 years old when he entered his first spelling competitio­n, in Ashburn, Va., in 2012. “He was very much into the alphabet and numbers, and had a very photograph­ic memory,” his father, Krishna Vukoti, recalled. “The people there, after seeing him, the kid who was in diapers, they all came onstage, saying, ‘Diaper Kid!'”

Akash, who turned 14 on Monday and lives in San Angelo, Tex., has outgrown the nickname but not his love of words and spelling. This week he will compete, again, in the Scripps National Spelling Bee - the Olympics of spelling tournament­s - becoming the only student in the competitio­n's 98-year history to enter six times.

Students must win their local and regional bees to qualify for the three-day event at National Harbor in Maryland, which starts Tuesday. It resumed fully in-person last year, when another Texan, 14-year-old Harini Logan, won in a rapid-fire spell-off late on the final night. This year the bee will draw 231 students, most from around the United States and a smattering from abroad.

To advance, contestant­s must spell a word from a 4,000-word list, answer a multiple-choice vocabulary question about a word on that list and spell a word that can appear anywhere in the Merriam-Webster Unabridged Dictionary. This year's finals will be Thursday night. The winner will receive more than $50,000 in prize money, along with a medal, trophy, and reference materials.

The bee's vast, air-conditione­d venue, at the Gaylord National Resort and Convention Center, is darkened except for stage lights beaming down on the spellers. Tension mounts as contestant­s are eliminated and words become increasing­ly obscure. Months of memorizing flashcards can be obliterate­d with one misplaced vowel. Most students who get this far are middlescho­ol age, though contestant­s cannot be past eighth grade or older than 15; the youngest this year are 9.

Akash first qualified for the Bee in 2016, when he was 6. He returned in 2018, 2019, 2021 and 2022. The farthest he got was 42nd place, in 2019, a record he hopes to break. This year is his last chance before he ages out.

“I'm just a person who really likes words,” Akash said by phone last week from his home in Texas. It felt hard to believe he was about to age out of the spelling circuit.

A home-schooled eighth-grader, Akash has his own YouTube channel and has appeared on “Jimmy Kimmel Live,” NBC's “Little Big Shots” and “Dancing with the Stars: Juniors.” He reads and writes in Hindi and Telugu, his parents' native language, but he said the words he finds easiest to spell are those of German origin, as most of them follow a certain set of rules.

Relatives in India are “so happy and excited,” though, she said. “They are curiously waiting to see what next Akash is going to do.”

 ?? Glenn and Melinda Hartong ?? Akash Vukoti is a home-schooled eighth-grader with his own YouTube channel.
Glenn and Melinda Hartong Akash Vukoti is a home-schooled eighth-grader with his own YouTube channel.

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