The Mercury News

National Spelling Bee stalwarts persevere through two-year gap

- By Ben Nuckols

When the Scripps National Spelling Bee was canceled last year because of the pandemic, Avani Joshi didn’t lament her lost year of preparatio­n. She immediatel­y pivoted to studying for competitio­ns in her other favorite discipline: geography.

Then, about six months later, the 2020-21 geography bee season was canceled, so she returned to spelling, confident that Scripps would bring back the biggest academic competitio­n on the calendar.

Avani also competes in Science Olympiad and quiz bowl. What if all of it had been wiped out?

“I would immerse myself in books, obviously. Books are always going to be there, so I have that guarantee that I can rely on books,” the 13-year-old from Roscoe, Illinois, said. “I also like coding, so I also have that. I would try to learn a new language. My goal is actually to learn C++ this year, and, let’s see, I would immerse myself in other things, honing my language skills, learning Spanish and Sanskrit.”

The restless minds of Avani and other top spellers got lessons in patience and perseveran­ce as COVID-19 forced them into lockdown. Spellers prepare for the bee year-round, drilling for hours a day, often with the help of pricey study guides and private coaches. Their competitiv­e window is small: Spellers can’t compete after the eighth grade, and it’s rare for kids to have more than one real shot at winning.

The two-year gap between bees only strengthen­ed the resolve of many spellers — including Avani, who will be competing in the finals Thursday night at an ESPN campus in Florida — to maximize their potential.

“My love for spelling is what has kept me going. If you don’t truly have a passion for spelling, the quarantine could be really, really hard for you,” said another finalist, 13-year-old Akshainie Kamma of Round Rock, Texas.

The disappoint­ment of 2020 was most sorely felt by that year’s eighth-graders, who were robbed of their last and best opportunit­y to win the Scripps trophy and unsuccessf­ully petitioned the Cincinnati­based media company to host a virtual or limitedpar­ticipation bee.

Those who competed two years ago but were still eligible this year struggled with a different challenge: lack of motivation.

“I pushed through it,” said Akshita Balaji, a 14-year-old semifinali­st from Herndon, Virginia. “My passion kind of went down a little bit. I was a little de-motivated and everything, but I was still studying.”

The bee itself underwent major changes since the last in-person competitio­n, which ended in an eight-way tie because Scripps’ word list wasn’t strong enough to challenge the champion spellers. Last December, bee executive director Paige Kimble — herself a former champion — stepped down.

J. Michael Durnil, a longtime nonprofit leader, took over and shepherded the bee’s return in a mostly virtual format, while adding vocabulary questions and a lightning-round tiebreaker to ensure the bee would conclude with a single winner.

Only the 11 finalists will compete in person because the ongoing threat of COVID-19 made it too risky to plan months in advance for a large in-person gathering during the bee’s traditiona­l spot on the calendar, the week before Memorial Day. The early rounds of the bee were stretched over a few weeks, concluding with last Sunday’s semifinals.

Changes to the rules and format of the bee often provoke strong reactions within the spelling community. Vocabulary questions, for example, had only been included on written tests before this year, and some believe they detract from the singular skill of figuring out on the fly how to spell an unfamiliar, crazy-sounding word.

But the pandemic and last year’s cancellati­on have put such minor changes in perspectiv­e.

“The knowledge, the experience and the learning that I’ve gained from the pandemic, it’s definitely taught me to adapt better,” Vayun Krishna, a 14-yearold from Sunnyvale, said before he was eliminated in the semifinals. “If this didn’t happen, if they’d introduced vocab I’d be in more of a panic, but now I feel like I’m taking it in stride.”

 ?? SCOTT P. YATES — ROCKFORD REGISTER STAR VIA AP ?? Avani Joshi, a 13-year-old eighth-grader from Roscoe Middle School, sits at her home June 24 in Roscoe, Ill. Joshi was in the semifinals of the Scripps National Spelling Bee.
SCOTT P. YATES — ROCKFORD REGISTER STAR VIA AP Avani Joshi, a 13-year-old eighth-grader from Roscoe Middle School, sits at her home June 24 in Roscoe, Ill. Joshi was in the semifinals of the Scripps National Spelling Bee.

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