She was immediately hugged by her parents, and then with tears of joy streaming down her face, received the massive engraved Scripps trophy from Rich Boene, chairman and CEO of Scripps.
Besides the trophy, Shivashankar's prizes included a $30,000 cash prize from Scripps, a $2,500 US Savings bond and a complete reference library from Merriam Webster, a $5,000 scholarship from Sigma Phi Epsilon Educational Foundation, and a $2,800 in reference works and the Britannica Test Prep Precocious Program valued at $799 from Encyclopedia Britannica.
Shivashankar, an 8th grader at California Trail Junior High School in Olathe, who became the first student from Kansas to win the title in the history of the 82-year-old competition, said her role model and inspiration for her spelling career was Nupur Lala, who won the title in 1999.
She plans to become a neurosurgeon, but for the time being, when she is not consumed by practicing spelling -- coached by her father -- she enjoys playing the violin, cycling, swimming and learning Indian classical dance.
Pastapur, also an eighth grader from Glenwood Middle School in Springfield, Illinois, by virtue of her third place, won a $7,500 cash prize and also, as did all the other 11 championship finalists, the 51-volume Britannica from Encyclopaedia Britannica, the Britannica Discover America and the 2008 Encyclopaedia Britannica Student Edition DVD.
Speller Kavya is congratulated by her father Mirle Shivashankar and mother Sandhya
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