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U.S. National Spelling Bee Champion Was Born in India but His Experience is All American
VOA ^

Posted on 06/15/2005 8:19:52 AM PDT by milestogo

U.S. National Spelling Bee Champion Was Born in India but His Experience is All American


13 June 2005


Anurag Kashyap with the winner's cup at the 2005 U.S. National Spelling Bee
Anurag Kashyap with the winner's cup at the 2005 U.S. National Spelling Bee
The National Spelling Bee is a peculiarly American institution, where school children aged 9 to 14 take turns spelling aloud English words of increasing and sometimes ludicrous difficulty. Yet the champion of this year's competition, held earlier this month in Washington, was Anurag Kashyap, an exuberant 13-year-old whose parents are immigrants from India. In this edition of New American Voices Mr. And Mrs. Kashyap talk about their son, and their life in America.

The Kashyap family came to North America -- initially to Canada, where Mr. Kashyap had a post-doctoral fellowship to study organic chemistry -- when Anurag was just 18 months old. When he was three, the family moved to the United States. Mr. Kashyap says that although his son's heritage is Indian, his experience is all American.

“He has no Indian experience, either in terms of language, or in terms of cultures, except what he gets from his [parents] or maybe sometimes TV movies. So in terms of language, he did not pick it up. English became his first language. And culture - well, he eats both Indian food and American food, and clothes-wise there is absolutely no problem. And I think he probably has more American friends. In the school he is quite popular, and many people like him, I would say he gets along very well.”

Language being no barrier, Anurag early on showed an interest in words. His father says he was about nine years old when the competitive spelling bug bit him.

“I believe that he started quite early. We used to go to the library, and we used to pick up - because we don't have Hindi books here, right? - so we picked up English books for children, and he was reading. I have a feeling that it started when he was in fourth grade, and he participated in a competition, and being a fourth grader he beat all the fifth graders in the school. And he went to the regional competition, and he came in third in the county. So it's my guess that was the starting point”

Scripps National Spelling Bee Logo
Scripps National Spelling Bee Logo
“From then on, Anurag participated in various local and regional spelling competitions. Last year he entered the National Spelling Bee for the first time -- and tied for 47th place. This year he beat out 272 other contestants by quickly and confidently spelling the word appoggiatura (an ornamental music note) in the 19th round. Anurag's father says his son's intense interest in spelling is his own -- his parents didn't push him into it.

“Absolutely no. In fact, sometimes we try to stop him. We did not discourage, we always encouraged -- learning anything is always good - but we did not push him, that 'Oh, you have to do only spelling.' Because as you will find, he is a well-rounded student in the school, he has contributed in all the subjects almost equally.”

Mrs. Archana Kashyap offers her own view of their son's broad range of interests.

“After studying he plays video games and he likes to play tennis very much. He's not a very good player, but he likes to play, he has fun with that.”

Anurag is the Kashyaps's only child. Mr. Kashayp, who earned a PhD in organic chemistry in India, joined the faculty of Purdue University in the Midwestern state of Indiana after immigrating to the United States. Two years ago, he moved his family to the San Diego area in California, where he found a job with a large biotech company. Chandra Kashyap says that his professional environment was a big help in smoothing the transition to life in a new country.

“Because I came as kind of like an academician, you know, I was in an academic environment,. A professor has his lab group involved, so I think I found some friends, and we have some Indian friends, too, who have PhDs from the same institutions, so we never felt that we are isolated or we are far.”

Mrs. Kashyap, who is a stay-at-home-mom, also had few problems with adjustment.

“Just that I missed my family there, because I moved here. And adjusting, it takes time. But other than that, everything is fine.”

Like many immigrants, the Kashyaps believe that the greatest advantage to life in America can be found in the opportunities it offers. As Chandra Kash

His father joins Anurag Kashyap  on the stage shortly after learning he is the new spelling champion
His father joins Anurag Kashyap  on the stage shortly after learning he is the new spelling champion
yap says, everybody has the chance to fare well here, if they have skills and work hard. He looks forward to seeing his son take advantage of these opportunities to achieve his full potential. As yet, the boy has no firm plans for the future.

“He's in eighth grade right now, so there is no specific or special subject where he can concentrate right now and go [ahead]. I think we have to watch for another two-three years, when he takes advanced courses, and see how he performs, and that will determine what he will go for.  If he has the talent and the determination, if he works hard and he's honest in his discipline, probably he can get to where he wants to go.”

Anurag certainly does not lack determination. Over the past two years he studied more than 100,000 words to prepare for the national spelling bee.  And he found lots of help along the way, from a spelling coach at school, and various Internet resources, to a wide network of computer friends who quizzed him constantly using on-line instant messaging.  A footnote to the Kashyap's story: all three finalists in this year's National Spelling Bee were children of Indian immigrants



TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: indianamericans; kashyap; spellingbee

1 posted on 06/15/2005 8:19:52 AM PDT by milestogo
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To: milestogo

This out-sourcing has just gone too far.

(Just kidding. Congratulations to the lad.)


2 posted on 06/15/2005 8:22:30 AM PDT by PBRSTREETGANG
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To: milestogo
Yet the champion of this year's competition, held earlier this month in Washington, was Anurag Kashyap, an exuberant 13-year-old whose parents are immigrants from India.

It's easy to be a spelling bee champ when all English words are easier to spell than your own name! :-)

3 posted on 06/15/2005 8:22:36 AM PDT by Bluegrass Conservative
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To: milestogo

But, but, American education discriminated against people of color!!!

Oh, that's right, only people of color from Africa....


4 posted on 06/15/2005 8:25:01 AM PDT by Conservatrix ("He who stands for nothing will fall for anything.")
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To: Conservatrix

discriminates

sorry


5 posted on 06/15/2005 8:25:41 AM PDT by Conservatrix ("He who stands for nothing will fall for anything.")
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To: Conservatrix
Oh, that's right, only people of color from Africa....

But only if they are born here and are 8th generation American.

1st generation or recent immigrants from Africa do very well.

6 posted on 06/15/2005 8:28:33 AM PDT by Phantom Lord (Advantages are taken, not handed out)
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To: Conservatrix

Apparently this kid was not criticised or demeaned for trying to act "white" by getting educated. When I was in school, the black losers would always pick on the black acheivers for trying to be white. Trying to get educated was frowned on by the majority of them. While the acheivers are now teachers, lawyers, electricians, etc. The losers are on the evening news police blotter.


7 posted on 06/15/2005 8:33:58 AM PDT by Ron in Acreage (It's the borders stupid! (ours, not theirs!))
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To: milestogo
The academic focus and competition in India is way beyond anything comparable here in the US. The ones that come to the US tend to be the best and the brightest.
8 posted on 06/15/2005 8:39:06 AM PDT by pterional
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To: Conservatrix

Actually I found the education here amazingly simple.


9 posted on 06/15/2005 8:47:10 AM PDT by spetznaz (Nuclear tipped ICBMs: The Ultimate Phallic Symbol.)
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To: milestogo

We got to know Anurag a little bit at the National competition (my son represented Colorado) and he is a great guy! He is very polite, very humble, and gives others credit before himself. In short, he is a great American! - who also happens to be ONE HECK of a speller... ;-)


10 posted on 06/15/2005 9:47:29 AM PDT by politicket (Hypothesis of Evolution - HOE - The Secular Religion)
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