Eleven year-old Akeelah Anderson's life is not easy: her father is dead,
her mom ignores her, her brother runs with the local gangbangers. She's
smart, but her environment threatens to strangle her aspirations.
Responding to a threat by her school's principal, Akeelah participates in a
spelling bee to avoid detention for her many absences. Much to her surprise
and embarrassment, she wins. Her principal asks her to seek coaching from
an English professor named Dr. Larabee for the more prestigious regional
bee. As the possibility of making it all the way to the Scripps National
Spelling Bee looms, Akeelah could provide her community with someone to
rally around and be proud of -- but only if she can overcome her
insecurities and her distracting home life. She also must get past Dr.
Larabee's demons, and a field of more experienced and privileged fellow
spellers.
Eleven year old African-American Akeelah Anderson comes from a working
class family living in South Los Angeles. Akeelah is a bright girl,
especially when it comes to words, but finds life at poor Crenshaw Middle
School boring and unchallenging, so she doesn't try. But her natural
aptitude for words spurs the school administrators, led by Principal Welch,
to convince her to try out for the process of the Scripps National Spelling
Bee. Akeelah, already feeling isolated from many in her school because of
being perceived as a "brainiac", feels that participating in such will make
her feel even more isolated. But her joy in learning new words at least
gets her started in the process. After easily winning the school's spelling
bee, she meets and befriends Javier Mendez, a competitor at the Los Angeles
district bee where most of the competitors come from primarily white middle
class to wealthy families. There, she learns about the nature of spelling
bee life in all its good and bad, the latter which includes the cutthroat
world of competitor parents. An example is Javier's classmate and two time
national runner-up Dylan Chiu, whose father will not settle for second best
as Dylan enters the last year he is eligible for the competition. Akeelah
learns she needs a coach, hers to be in the form of former spelling bee
competitor and UCLA English Department Chair Dr. Joshua Larabee, who
teaches Akeelah not only the rote memorization of typical spelling bee
words, but how to use English in all its glorious facets. Akeelah
progresses further and further into spelling bee life without telling her
widowed mother Tanya, who sees the bees as impinging into time in her other
school work. Other challenges that Akeelah faces are trying to balance
working on her spelling against time with her friends, and handling the
hopes and dreams of all of South Los Angeles on her shoulders. Ultimately
there may be more important things in Akeelah's life than winning the
national championship.