T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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418.1 | this hit a hot button | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Mon Oct 15 1990 13:28 | 19 |
| I would never in a thousand years reduce myself to such a level of
nitpicking and harping as to correct my preschool children's
grammatical errors when they're trying to explain something else
to me. I occassionally, if I can do it in a noncritical way, try
to explain about language and the different ways to say things,
but not "correct their grammar." And if a daycare teacher asked
me to do that, I'd be looking for a new daycare.
Children learn language by hearing it spoken around them and using
it themselves. They will speak the language of their social
group pretty much regardless of what you do about it. You may be
able to teach them that there are other ways of speaking, what the
grammaticians call "other levels of discourse" -- more formal for
school, for instance, and very formal for meeting the mayor -- but
if you live in a yuppie suburb your kids will, like the neighbors,
tell their friends "I can't relate to that," where a child in a
different environment will say, "F you."
--bonnie
|
418.2 | | CSC32::WILCOX | Back in the High Life, Again | Mon Oct 15 1990 13:45 | 9 |
| Bonnie, I'm not certain but I think maybe what the daycare person was getting
at could be something like the following:
Child: "Look at what I drawed!"
Parent: "Why yes, look at what you drew, it's beautiful!"
In this way, the child is hearing the word used in the right tence without
really being corrected.
|
418.3 | | TCC::HEFFEL | That was Zen; This is Tao. | Mon Oct 15 1990 14:07 | 7 |
| Re: -1 Or even the right tenSe. :-)
(Yes, it was nit picky. Yes, it was a low blow. But in the context of
this discussion, I just COULDN'T let this one go by without comment. )
Tracey
(Who is NOT having fun today!)
|
418.4 | more on grammar | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Mon Oct 15 1990 15:00 | 39 |
| In re: grammar
I'm with bonnie. Correcting a kid's grammar on the spot is a
mistake, and a poor pedagogical practice. Having a pre-school
director suggest it also displays surprising ignorance (which would not
be surprising at all in a parent).
Language acquisition is probably the most thoroughly studied and best
understood aspect of cognitive psychology. Kids do not learn the
"proper" language of their sub-culture by being corrected, or by being
exposed only to "correct" utterances. They do gradually, and in a very
predictable sequence, develop an immensely abstract subconscious rule
schema. Basically all kids learning a given language go through it in
the same sequence. They'll all have a conversation like this:
kid: I drawed this picture, mom.
mom: You drew this picture today?
kid: Yes, I drawed this picture in class.
mom: You drew this picture in the morning?
kid: Yes, I drawed it before lunch.
You get the picture. There is a rule that you add "ed" to get past
tense. A child needs to operate under this rule for awhile before
passing on to a more abstract rule that admits of irregular verbs.
Nagging will not change or hurry the sequence, just inhibit the child.
In recent years there has been a new approach to initial instruction in
writing called "invented spelling." For the first year, any spelling
that is meaningful to the kid (and hopefully decodable by an adult) is
considered "OK". I had tried to teach Aaron proper spelling, but as
soon as his Kindergarten teacher made the case for this, I relaxed, and
his willingness and ability to write shot suddenly ahead. Once he got
to like stringing written words into sentences and longer units, he
basically taught proper spelling to himself. Before invented spelling,
he was a rather reluctant writer, though a very precocious reader. I
know it also worked well with kids who were normal or slow readers,
too.
- Bruce
|
418.5 | Inventive spelling | NOVA::WASSERMAN | Deb Wasserman, DTN 264-1863 | Mon Oct 15 1990 15:21 | 7 |
| Yes, I just heard about this "inventive spelling" from my sister who
teaches first grade. I have to admit, I was kind of skeptical, not to
mention being pretty amused at this "inventive" euphemism! Incorrect
spellings tend to jump off the page at me, so I tend to be in favor of
teaching correct spelling right from the start. But I suppose if it
really encourages kids to write, there will be time for spelling tests
and such later.
|
418.6 | non-inventive teaching | COOKIE::CHEN | Madeline S. Chen, D&SG Marketing | Mon Oct 15 1990 18:24 | 5 |
|
I believe that children speak as they hear, and write as they read. An
extremely talented child can even write as he/she speaks.
-m
|
418.7 | Criticism vs Correction | MAJORS::MANDALINCI | | Tue Oct 16 1990 08:01 | 29 |
| Are there any good reference books around about speech patterns for
pre-schoolers. I have one book that sites examples like Bruce's (.6?)
of children adding the "ed" on the end of a word to make it past tense.
This is how most English words are but of course there are exceptions
like draw/drew - throw/threw - etc. You cannot expect a pre-schooler to
how all the rules of the English grammer.
Things I am wrestling with now with my son (2.8 years old) is him using
the correct "sexual distinction". If he is speaking about a girl he
will often say "he, his" in reference to that female. I tried to
explain that "ladies are shes" and "men are hes" or "girls are shes"
and "boys are hes" but to him everyone is still a "him". I'm not
worried about it but I don't know when I can expect him to get the
correct gender. He points out girls versus boys and ladies versus men
so he can make the sexual identification but he doesn't know how that
translates into using the correct pronouns, etc. It will come in time.
About the daycare...if they are correcting with "you said that wrong"
techniques then I would be upset. You cannot expect pre-schoolers to
know all the rules of English grammer. They should be encouraging
correct speech with a response using the correct word like "I DRAWED
this picture", "Oh, you DREW it today?" and rarely, if ever, a response
of "No it's I DREW this picture". You've just shot down the poor kid
and have discouraged him/her from telling you things.
There is a major difference (and results) from constant versus
constructive criticism and correction.
Andrea
|
418.8 | Supportive correction, not an attack | DSSDEV::STEGNER | | Tue Oct 16 1990 09:37 | 19 |
| I guess I should have been more clear. When the director told me this,
the boys were 4 and 5. Yes, technically they're preschool, but they'd
been talking for years and were close enough to school age to start
learning rules of grammar.
Yes, the boys were corrected, but not "picked-at" (I don't say, "No,
you're wrong-- it's THIS."). I've noticed that my boys are sponges
(as are most children), and they like to learn, so why not have them
learn correct grammar instead of using incorrect grammar? And as
other noters have mentioned, the errors mainly occur with the
nonstandard past tenses (draw/drew).
Yes, I agree that environment has a lot to do with it, and the fact
that my older boys have been reading since an early age, but they'll
make mistakes, and I want them to learn what's correct.
Pam-the-writer-and-daughter-of-a-grammar-lover-whose-mother-taught-English
|
418.9 | "no" vs "any" | FSOA::LAROIAN | | Tue Oct 16 1990 09:52 | 17 |
| My daughter is 2 years 9 months. I also encourage her to tell me
"stories" about her day without making interuptions for grammatical
corrections. EXCEPT .... there are a few grammatical errors/slang
expressions that affect me like fingernails on a chalkboard and I do
correct her. For example:
She: I don't want no milk.
Me: Any milk.
She: I don't want any milk.
She's picked up the "no" vs "any" from both her daycare provider AND my
mother-in-law. She spends alot of time with both of them.
Who knows why it makes MY skin crawl, but I've occasionally corrected
my mother-in-law, too!!!
L.
|
418.10 | | CSC32::WILCOX | Back in the High Life, Again | Tue Oct 16 1990 10:38 | 1 |
| Bruce, I don't see your example conversation as "nagging", do you?
|
418.11 | | CSC32::WILCOX | Back in the High Life, Again | Tue Oct 16 1990 10:42 | 3 |
| re .9 do I ever know what you mean about the "I don't want no milk" kind
of speach! My mother in law talks like that and she used to teach English!
|
418.12 | grammar isn't learned in isolation | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Tue Oct 16 1990 10:47 | 62 |
| Let me start with an anecdote of my own.
Steven at age 4 had a crush on his teacher, so at home one evening
he wrote wrote a little story for her. It was, "The line is
brushing his tooths." (He asked me how to spell "brushing".) And
he decorated it with a big brown lion and an enormous red
toothbrush. He read it to her in school the next morning. She
said, "You spelled "lion" wrong." He said, "Why didn't you like
my story?"
Language is for the most part instrumental. That is, we use words
to get a glass of milk, to share our excitement about a drawing,
to tell our teacher we like her, to tell stories, or to
communicate a new sales plan. Only occasionally do we speak,
write, or read just to hear the sound of the words.
Learning the words that will get us what we want is generally a
cyclical process. The person grasps a new rule and proceeds to
apply it, making some mistakes of overextension in applying that
rule where it doesn't belong. The person sees that the rule
didn't work in that situation and refines the rule, applying it
again in another situation. They learn that what is a mistake in
one situation is expected form in another situation. You can say
"don't want no milk" at grandma's but not at mom's; you say "can I
have a glass of water" to your friends and "may I have a glass of
water" to your English teacher. This is a concept called "levels
of discourse" and it's a key concept in using language
effectively.
But the cycle doesn't work without the step of using what is
already known, and sometimes making mistakes.
The same is true of writing, including spelling. A person learns
to write by writing, by trying to express ideas -- whether that
idea is as simple as writing down an order for hamburgers and
fries or as complex as a dissertation on plasma physics. In
trying to express the idea, the person will apply known rules and
stretch to learn the rest. They will imitate techniques they have
heard -- does using "they" for an unknown individual of any sex or
age work better than "one" which is formal or "you" which can be
interpreted as accusing individuals, even though "they" is plural?
But the focus is on the *idea* and feedback is interpreted in
terms of the idea that was being expressed. (Exactly what Steven
did. He wasn't interested in learning grammar; he wanted the
teacher to like him.) The whole process of writing is refined
together. Ideas are focussed more clearly, expressed in more
complex sentences, spelled better.
The best way to teach anyone, kids as well as adults, standard
grammar is to them work with language. Read them interesting
books; help them write their own stories (both factual and
creative ideas), with the focus on the idea being expressed rather
than mechanics. Mechanics -- the rules of how those ideas are
expressed -- generally don't stick well until the person
understands what kind of idea the rules apply to. For instance,
spelling is a meaningless concept until a person understands that
the visible symbols called letters represent the sounds that
come out of one's mouth, and those letters combine to make words
that represent ideas.
--bonnie, who is also a writer, a teacher of English, and a lover
of language
|
418.13 | | DSSDEV::STEGNER | | Tue Oct 16 1990 13:06 | 36 |
| Starting down a rathole...
If a child says something that is gramatically incorrect and is not
corrected-- NOT CRITICIZED, *CORRECTED* -- he will continue to use it
because he thinks it's fine, or because it has become a habit. Because
I believe this, I correct my children. I do not attack them--
as another note said, I do it in a "noncritical" way. But they learn.
I don't think that's a bad thing.
Spelling is not the same thing, however. I think the teacher in the
previous note was dead wrong. Of course a 4 year old is going
to spell some words wrong. Who cares? At 4, most children aren't
reading, and the concept of letters is just beginning to sink in.
The teacher should have taken the story for what it was-- a charming
story from an admirer. It was unreasonable for her to behave as she
did. But correcting a child for saying she doesn't "want no milk" is
not unreasonable.
A story: I've been teaching my son's first grade class how to
use one of the programs on their Apple computer. It highlights
a little graphic of a common object, and the child has to press the
arrow key to move the pointer down to point to the first letter of
the word. Some of the children can read, some cannot. Some of the
children can spell, some cannot. Most of the children know what
sounds the different letters make, but a few do not. One little
girl saw a picture of a fish and said, "I know that one! That
starts with 'S', right?" What was I supposed to do-- let that go by?
I said, "The letter S makes the "ssssssss" sound. What letter makes
the "fuh" sound?" I don't think that's being unreasonable.
My son (6) can read (since he turned 4) almost anything, can spell,
understands how letters and phonics work, and has a great vocabulary.
Yes, environment has a lot to do with it. Obviously having me correct
an incorrect verb tense has not hindered him at all.
Pam-a-mother-who-wants-her-children-to-talk-good :-)
|
418.14 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Tue Oct 16 1990 13:58 | 12 |
| .10 > Bruce, I don't see your example conversation as "nagging", do you?
You're correct, I didn't mean that the "drawed / drew /drawed / drew /
drawed" conversation is nagging. But I also don't view it as
"correcting." I have conversations like that all the time with my kids.
But (and this is the point) I don't view the conversation as any less
successful if the child doesn't pick up on the difference. When they're
ready to move onto the next stage, they will do it, whether or not I
obsessively present them with "good examples" (which I tend to do, by
the way).
- Bruce
|
418.15 | Context and age are important | POWDML::SATOW | | Tue Oct 16 1990 14:15 | 50 |
| I think that this is another example of there being a time and place for
everything. But, Pam, I fail to grasp the differentiation between spelling
errors and grammatical errors.
I think that the teacher in Bonnie's example made a big mistake.
I think it would have been just as big a mistake is she had corrected the
incorrect pluralization (teeths) as the misspelling of "lion". But the
incorrect pluralization is much closer to being a grammatical error than a
misspelling. When my children were four, I might have corrected them when
they said "I don't want no milk", but I wouldn't dream of correcting them if
they had said "I loves you". Similarly, if one of them had made a mother's
day card saying "Happy Muther's Day" I wouldn't correct them, but I might if
they had written "I like skool". So to me the differentiation is more one of
context than whether it is grammar or spelling.
To me the following two comments are equally reasonable:
> If a child says something that is gramatically incorrect and is not
> corrected . . . he will continue to use it
> because he thinks it's fine, or because it has become a habit.
If a child spells something incorrectly and is not
corrected . . . he will continue to spell it incorrectly
because he thinks it's fine, or because it has become a habit.
as are the following two:
> Of course a 4 year old is going
> to spell some words wrong. Who cares? At 4, most children aren't
> reading, and the concept of letters is just beginning to sink in.
Of course a 4 year old is going make some grammatical errors.
Who cares? At 4, most children aren't communicating in full, gramatically
correct sentences, and the concept of syntax is just beginning to sink in.
Not only do I think that the context is important, but I think expectations of
correct grammar and spelling should be appropriate to age. "Can you and me
play baseball" goes unnoticed from my younger, but not from my older. I do
not expect my younger to spell "Massachusetts" correctly, but I do expect my
older. And it will be some time before I expect either of them to say "If I
were . . ." as opposed to "If I was . . ."
> One little
> girl saw a picture of a fish and said, "I know that one! That
> starts with 'S', right?"
Now if she were _really_ sophisticated, she would have proposed that it be
spelled "ghoti". :^)
Clay
|
418.16 | I agree | DSSDEV::STEGNER | | Tue Oct 16 1990 16:04 | 13 |
| Again I should have been clearer.... For Bonnie's 4 year old,
I would have let the "line" slide and highlighted the story instead.
I don't expect 4 year olds to spell every word correctly. But if
a 4 year old made a grammatical error in speech (i.e. don't want no),
I'd point out the error... *nicely*. But as the child ages, of
course spelling errors should be pointed out, too, for exactly the
reasons you mentioned. I was still talking about the case of
Bonnie's son... a 4 year old... I expect my oldest (6) to spell words
correctly and use proper grammar. I'm thrilled when my 15-month-
old says "Mama dar-row ta-ta." Age and context, just like you said.
:-)
|
418.17 | but what didn't you get to talk about? | TLE::RANDALL | self-defined person | Tue Oct 16 1990 16:15 | 60 |
| This statement is, according to language development people and my
own experience working with beginning readers of all ages, not
true:
> If a child says something that is gramatically incorrect and is not
>corrected-- NOT CRITICIZED, *CORRECTED* -- he will continue to use it
> because he thinks it's fine, or because it has become a habit. Because
> I believe this, I correct my children. I do not attack them--
> as another note said, I do it in a "noncritical" way. But they learn.
Children do not continue to say things that they don't hear around
them, and they do say things they do hear around them. If at one
stage they overapply a rule such as "add -ed to make the past
tense," and the people around them speak standard English, they
will soon learn the irregular past tenses. Similarly, if everyone
around them speaks BED (Black English Dialect) and does not form
verb tenses in the standard way, no amount of correction of their
spoken words will change "I be happy today." (As many an
aching-headed teacher has learned.)
In this context, I doubt that the child perceives much difference
between an explicit criticism and the criticism implicit in a
correction. Both function to take the attention away from the
idea or feeling that's being expressed and put it on the details.
That's what I meant by nit-picking -- the focus on the less
important at the expense of the important.
Oddly, when you shift focus to the important, the details tend to
come along. When I was teaching standard English to young adult
speakers of BED, I never did a specific grammar-mechanics lesson.
We focussed on understanding the reading and on clarifying ideas.
I talked about figures of speech and analogy and parallel
structure, and they wrote about dental work and the governmental
structure of Peru. And yet my students scored better than anybody
else on the end-of-term grammar-and-usage test the school gave all
students.
I didn't deserve any credit. All I did was provide them with the
opportunity to see how good writers use language. They looked at
it and used it to convey their ideas, and in so doing they
absorbed the usage they needed.
When my kids say "Look at the picture I drawed this morning," I'd
much rather say "Oh, wow, that's pretty! Is that supposed to be
the sun?" It's not that correcting their grammar is such a
terrible thing in itself as that it tends to blind you to the real
message in what your child is telling you and to the opportunities
for conversations about ideas they have to grope to express and
maybe don't always do correctly.
Clay's partly right -- since Steven's now 6 and in school, I
wouldn't expect that phrasing from him any more, and would be
worried if he were doing it as more than amusing baby talk. So
yes, age and context are important. In fact, the best way to deal
with issues such as friends or relatives who have a different
level of formality in their colloquial diction is usually to
explain in plain terms that it's okay to say that at x's house but
not in yours.
--bonnie
|
418.18 | Whatever you do, ya gotta not put the child down | KAOFS::S_BROOK | Originality = Undetected Plagiarism | Tue Oct 16 1990 17:44 | 27 |
| What this really boils down to in my books is that there is a time and
place for everything ...
When a kiddie is seeking admiration, the last thing s/he needs is a put-
down so you overlook grammatical and spelling errors.
When a kiddie is working on, say homework, then you definitely work
on these things ... but never correct in a critical way and never put
the child down for his/her errors.
For the million and one potential cases in between, you have to use
discretion. For example ... a kiddie is making a card to send to
teacher ... encourage her/him to seek out help for words or grammar
not understood ... our 6 year old asks us how to spell words regularly
and how to say something ... if you catch a mistake before it is
committed to paper, correct it ... after it is committed to paper,
mention it but don't FOCUS on the error ... say something like
"actually we usually write 'the lions are asleep' (child used is)
but it doesn't matter because the teacher will like it anyway.
BUT sense the mood of your child ... if he/she is likely to tear the
card up because they may think it no good ... then don't correct.
Just m.h.o.
Stuart
|
418.19 | THEORY OR PRACTICE | COOKIE::CHEN | Madeline S. Chen, D&SG Marketing | Tue Oct 16 1990 17:51 | 17 |
|
I must have been a bad parent - I never corrected my children's
grammar, and only assisted on spelling if the children asked me to
help (same with math, science, etc...). I did read to them a lot,
and we *never* used "baby talk".
Amazingly, my children speak just like I do - with as correct a usage
of the English language as I have (no better, no worse). Also,
amazingly, they do NOT speak like my husband, who has some grammatical
differences in his English (he is not a native born American).
Perhaps a child develops in spite of his parents?
-m
|
418.20 | | NAVIER::SAISI | | Tue Oct 16 1990 17:55 | 11 |
| It seems like if you are trying to encourage creativity (journal
or story writing exercises) that ignoring the grammar and spelling
errors is the way to go. If you are doing rote (sp?) exercises
then that would be the time to correct. I agree with the premise
that we develop an "ear" for the correct way to speak. I can still
remember taking my LSATs and there was alot of grammar. I knew
which examples were right, although I couldn't think of the rule
for why. I just read them to myself and picked the one that sounded
correct. Then I came to work for Digital and have gone steadily
downhill since. :-)
Linda
|
418.21 | | POWDML::SATOW | | Wed Oct 17 1990 09:04 | 81 |
| re: .14
> But (and this is the point) I don't view the conversation as any less
> successful if the child doesn't pick up on the difference. When they're
> ready to move onto the next stage, they will do it, whether or not I
> obsessively present them with "good examples" (which I tend to do, by
> the way).
Bruce, I think you may be selling the effect of the examples a little short.
Even if the child doesn't immediately pick up the difference, I have to
believe that the cumulative effect is that the child will begin (for example)
using "drew" instead of "drawed" sooner than if the parent didn't present good
examples -- and probably would continue to use "drawed" longer (perhaps
permanently) if the parents used "drawed" also. Bonnie's reasoning in .17
on how patterns of speech develop appeals to me.
re: .19
> Perhaps a child develops in spite of his parents?
No, but its not the only influence. If all of your child's friends and
teacher spoke like your husband, I would imagine that your son's speech
patterns would be more like your husband's than yours.
re: .17
Bonnie, I agree with you that correcting grammer can be done to the
point that it interferes with hearing the message. I agree with .19's
approach that never correcting is better than overcorrecting. I also agree
that's a strange thing for a preschool daycare provider to set as a priority.
But I don't think that a certain amount, done discreetly, hurts. In fact, if
done properly, it could send a clear message to the child that speaking
properly is important. And it IS, particularly as a child becomes older.
I do think that we are capable of functioning on more than one level. In your
example,
> "Oh, wow, that's pretty! Is that supposed to be
> the sun?"
instead were:
"Oh, wow, that's a pretty picture you drew! You drew it all by
yourself?!?! Is that supposed to be the sun?"
I don't think that the child would feel criticized or bad. The main message
is the enthusiasm over the picture. Of course if the response is
"Look at the picture you *DREW* this morning. Oh yes, that's very nice"
Then, yeah, the kid would feel bad.
Also, not everything a kid says is full of meaning. "I don't want no milk"
might be some subliminal, rejection of the person offering the milk, but
more likely it means that she doesn't want any milk, or at most that she's
thirsty (or that she's really sophisticated and can distinguish between not
wanting milk and wanting "no milk".
I think it's also true that the Pygmalion effect works at a relatively young
age -- and gets more and more pronounced as the child gets older. Not
everyone is as skilled as we are ( ;^)) at "hearing the real message".
Suppose, for example, that Steven had written a story about "The Lion Brushes
His Teeth", then he may have gotten the response he wanted from the teacher.
His self esteem would have been enhanced, not diminished. It ain't fair, it
ain't right, but it's real.
I am also intrigued by the depth of feeling that can accompany discussions of
incorrect grammar, spelling, etc. An earlier noter mentioned how a particular
grammar error can lead her to correct her mother-in-law. For a long time, my
son and I had a strong disagreement over the correct pronunciation of
"Diplodocus"; neither of us would budge from our positions. Why is it so
important to me? I don't know. To this day, if I am reading to him, I don't
pronounce the word. I let him (mis)pronounce it, and grit my teeth. And
misuse of apostrophe's (especially by "Principle Engineer's") drive's me
absolutely nut's. Perhaps in each of us has was a subconcious schoomarm who
raps our knuckles with an 18 inch ruler every time we hear or see a
grammatical error.
Clay
|
418.22 | yes, that's how the Internal Censor develops | TLE::RANDALL | self-defined person | Wed Oct 17 1990 11:04 | 58 |
| re: .21
First of all, I didn't mean to say there was never a place for
grammatical corrections -- it's just a much smaller and less
critical place than most people think it is. And generally people
can only learn the "rules" associated with a construct they
already know how to use. Spelling, for instance, is something you
can only teach to someone who understands that words are made up
of a fixed series of letters. Telling you to put commas around
intruded adverbial phrases, for another example, only makes sense
if you know what an adverbial phrase is and how to intrude it in a
sentence.
So, as Stuart put it, knowing the age and the ability of the
person involved, and making sure what you say is at their level,
is critical. Focussing on it to the exclusion of other, more
important aspects of language and personal development leads to
the phenomenon Clay jokingly described:
>Perhaps in each of us has was a subconcious schoomarm who
>raps our knuckles with an 18 inch ruler every time we hear or see a
>grammatical error.
This is what happens to most people -- they internalize a harsh
Editor or Critic who stands at the back of our minds scrawling
red-pen corrections all over our ideas before we ever get them
out. Books aimed at teaching literate adults how to write reports
or stories or even letters without undue anxiety are full of
techniques for quieting one's Internal Critic before it becomes an
Internal Censor who prevents us from writing or thinking at all.
The Internal Critic is the person who harps in the ear of a lot of
read-only noters, "I'd like to contribute, but I don't write well
enough to say anything worthwhile." It keeps a friend of mine
from taking a job as a product manager because "It takes too much
writing and I never learned how to write all those big words you
have to know," as if big words were more important than the
thoughts and ideas.
Most of us learned this in school or from our parents, and it's
still what's being taught. We don't learn about first thoughts
and first drafts and second drafts and editing and all the rest of
the cycle of generating good writing. We learn that everything
has to be mechanically correct when it first comes out of our
brain or else it has to be red-inked.
I'm exaggerating a bit, of course; not all of us get treated this
way and for most of us it's a lot more subtle than the woman whose
mother used to "correct" and return the letters she sent from
college. Most of us were never taught that the rules for
colloquial speech are different and far less formal than the rules
for written discourse, that there are several levels of formality
in writing, that there are a number of dialects in this country
that use varying grammatical forms -- such as "he don't", which is
common throughout the midwest among almost everybody, even the
highly educated, when they're having a good time at a bar.
--bonnie
|
418.23 | Write first - spell later | ISLNDS::AMANN | | Wed Oct 17 1990 12:04 | 27 |
| Correcting a child's spelling can be disastrous.
I have a learning disabled son. Many LD children not only can't
read with sight methods (their ability to retain a visual memory
of a word is very limited) but have extreme difficulties with spelling.
When Chris was in his local school, whenver he wrote something he'd
get it back with lots of red marks. He quickly learned to reduce
the red marks by reducing his written output. He became extremely
adverse to writing. If you asked him for a story on his favorite
topic (baseball) you might get three sentences back.
Once he started in a school that recognized his learning disabilities
he was given encouragement to write - to keep a journal - to express
his ideas - WITHOUT worrying about the spelling. His aversion to
writing has ended. Today we sometimes have to insist he stop writing
and go to bed, because he gets into writing assignments and will
stay up to all hours writing.
Despite all the writing, his spelling is still poor - although its
also very phonetic. He is elarning new strategies to work on the
spelling, however, including the use of computer spell checkers.
Once his teachers (and parents) stopped harping on his spelling,
the writing blossomed. Of course, as he has come to realize he
likes to write he has also developed his own internal desire to
spell better.
|
418.24 | | NAVIER::SAISI | | Wed Oct 17 1990 12:10 | 12 |
| I think it has to do with how much importance you put on creativity
vs. correctness. I would want to encourage creativity in a child,
so would not worry so much about the mechanics. It is probably
a good idea to have some exercises that are rote grammar and spelling
and other exercises that are "freestyle" where the child's imagination
doesn't have to be limited by his level of skill. Regarding the
"inner ear", I took the LSAT about 10 years ago and there was _alot_
of grammar in it. Very rarely could I actually site the grammar
rule, I just read each example and picked the one that sounded right.
It gave me an awareness of how socio-economic background could keep
some kids out of law school.
Linda
|
418.25 | I can relate to that! | NRADM::TRIPPL | | Wed Oct 17 1990 13:04 | 17 |
| re .23, I can relate to what you're saying, it DOES carry into
adulthood! My husband was diagnosed wiht a mild form of dyslexia as a
child and still spells phonectically (? my spelling) He has 2 degrees,
and is also a DECie in a rather obvious position with EH&S. I found
for him something to help with spelling called the "Misspeller's
Dictionary" he keeps it on his desk at work, and uses it frequently.
According to my mother inlaw he was supposed to grow up and be useless
as an adult, obviously some psycologist made a mistake! But as you
indicated the red lines of correction are real discouraging. I
remember him getting his college exams back, correct for material, but
many instuctors would take points off for his spelling. If only
they could be made to understand this.
My opinion...thank heavens for Spellcheck on the systems!!
Lyn
|
418.26 | Schoolmarm whack! :-) | DSSDEV::STEGNER | | Wed Oct 17 1990 13:19 | 8 |
| re: .21
My personal pet peeve is "your" versus "you're". My son just came
home with something that his teacher had written that said,
"Your invited to a party".
Arrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrgh!!!!
|
418.27 | Grammer Can Be Learned--Spelling No Way | CURIE::POLAKOFF | | Wed Oct 17 1990 13:45 | 33 |
|
I am sorry, but I have a real problem with people (not young children)
who speak incorrectly. I use the method others recommend here with my
3 year old--she will say something grammatically incorrect and I will
answer her grammatically correct--without pointing out any difference
in our resonse or remark.
However, once she reaches school age (ie: 1st grade), I feel it's time
to start correcting. If she has a learning disability, of course I
will accomodate her in whatever way is helpful--but as a parent, I feel
it is my job to make sure she speaks correctly.
I am terrible at grammer rules--I don't know one from the other. But I
had a mother who constantly corrected my grammer once I was old enough
where it mattered (ie: 1st grade). I hated it at the time--but it
stood me in very good stead throughout junior high, high school,
college, etc. and to this day, my grammer usage is quite good. Again,
I don't know rules--but I do know how to write and speak correctly.
Spelling is something else. I am convinced that people are either born
with the ability to be good spellers--or born to be poor spellers. I
don't think poor spelling has much to do with intelligence, or speaking
and writing ability. I believe that good and bad spelling is
inherited. My mother is a terrific speller. She worked with me
constantly to make me a good speller too. My father was a HORRIBLE
speller--despite the advanced degrees from Ivy League schools. I am a
horrible speller--despite my mother, and an advanced degree in English.
So there.
Bonnie
|
418.28 | Born spellers | CIVIC::JANEB | See it happen => Make it happen | Wed Oct 17 1990 15:00 | 22 |
| > Spelling is something else. I am convinced that people are either born
> with the ability to be good spellers--or born to be poor spellers. I
> don't think poor spelling has much to do with intelligence, or speaking
> and writing ability. I believe that good and bad spelling is
> inherited.
There was an article in the New York Times about this about 6 months
ago. I don't remember if it was in the Education or Science section,
but was based on recent research and supported what you're saying!
[ I tried to write "your" instead of "you're" in response to the
earlier reply about the misuse of those words, but I couldn't make
myself do it! It bugs me that much, too! ]
And back to Parenting, I think that we'll find out that MANY more
things are "nature" instead of "nurture" as we raise our kids. It's a
great trend: towards accepting them as individuals while we help them
be the best they can be.
|
418.29 | no one correct language | TLE::RANDALL | self-defined person | Wed Oct 17 1990 15:31 | 29 |
| One should bear in mind that what is "correct" speaking varies
according to context. There is no one identifiable set of rules
that forms a U.S. English that is correct under any and all
circumstances, regardless of who is present and what activities
are under way.
For instance, the first paragraph of this reply is written in a
formal, stilted style appropriate to dissertations (and perhaps to
notes in certain moods).
If I came out with a sententious proclamation like that at my
mother's dinner table, it would be a deliberate insult to my
family's way of life. We are not formal at dinner and never have
been; dinner is a time for sharing, touching bases, making bad
jokes. At another family's dinner, with people who preferred a
more restrained style, my family's jokes would be equally
incorrect -- and this although both families use "standard"
English.
If I were a guest in a home where BED or Appalachian or other U.S.
dialects were spoken, a formal pronouncement might be an even
worse insult. At a football game with friends I'd just sound
stupid.
So as much as any abstract "correctness," we need to teach our
children to be sensitive to the people around them and to adjust
their levels of diction in ways appropriate to the circumstances.
--bonnie
|
418.30 | At Least Know It--Can Decide To Apply It Or Not | CURIE::POLAKOFF | | Wed Oct 17 1990 16:03 | 30 |
|
Bonnie,
I think what you are saying is that we need to teach our children to be
sensitive to the lives and cultures of other people. I wholeheartedly
agree.
However, I still feel very strongly that correct English (as defined by
Strunk and White, The Elements of Style) is the way to go when teaching
correct grammar--whether you are doing it by the book--or by the seat
of your pants (as I will have to--not knowing formal grammar rules).
Even though I write and speak properly--I can certainly "let my hair
down" in any conversation and adapt my tone and intonation to those
around me, when appropriate. I have also been known to let out a "I
don't want no apples" when feeling very loose and informal--the
distinction being...I know the difference between what I've said and
what is correct. I've simply chosen to use incorrect grammar.
The bottom line is that whatever culture or socio-economic class or
neighborhood our kids come from--they will find themselves in the same
world, competing for the same jobs, at some point in their lives. Most
people will not hire someone who uses incorrect grammar in a job
interview. The point is--a person needs to know the correct usage. If
they choose not to use it, that's one thing. But not to know it is, in
my mind, handicapping them for the rest of their lives.
Bonnie
|
418.31 | (Latin Mass was dropped too soon for me . . .) | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Wed Oct 17 1990 16:28 | 67 |
| In re: .27, .28
I didn't see the NYT article, but can vouch that different learning
abilities/styles extend beyond spelling. I looked into this when on a
faculty committee re-evaluating a college foreign language requirement.
After early childhood, most people acquire foreign language skills by a
combination of visual (reading, writing) and aural/oral (listening,
speaking) experience. There is a subgroup that really cannot learn
through the aural/oral methods that currently dominate most foreign
language instruction. There is a smaller subgroup that really cannot
acquire foreign languages from reading and writing. I am in the latter
group, and, as an example, I was completely unable to learn Latin when
in graduate school, even though it was essential to the field I was
studying (I eventually switched to a quite different field). I cannot
learn foreign languages from books, regardless of motivation and
effort. On the other hand, I've been fairly fluent in Spanish and
German (and to a lesser degree, French) because one can listen to and
speak them.
And this has major impact on specific native language skills, too. For
example, English spelling is very hard for me, because of major
non-phonetic aspects. On the other hand, I could once spell almost
flawlessly in German. I look up words in the dictionary all the time,
but they simply don't get transferred to long-term memory. If I don't
write a word down right after looking it up, I have to look it up again
immediately.
These linguistic abilities/disabilities have nothing to do with general
intelligence. I know university professors who can't learn languages
aurally, and my problem has nothing to do with a generally poor
_memory_. { One day I memorized 75 digits of pi for shear pleasure (and
I remember 30 or so a few decades later). And in college I was always
being drafted to replace someone at the last moment in the cast of a
play, because I could memorize a major part overnight, if needed.} But
I cannot memorize what English vowel goes where (I have very little
trouble with consonants).
And this does relate to childhood grammer acquisition. I cannot learn
grammer from rules, or books, or being "corrected," and I couldn't as a
child. But I mastered grammer very well as a child from an infinite
sea of examples, which included written as well as spoken examples.
Since youth, I have scarcely been able to think a thought, let alone
utter a sentence, that was gramatically improper. As it happend (it
really was coincidence), I also went to a "progressive" school that
didn't _teach_ conventional grammer. I had never even _heard of_ terms
like "subjunctive," "dative," "imperative," or "pluperfect" until I got
to high school German class.
And it is now well established that my style of intuitive, unconscious
rule formation from examples is the normal style of native language
acquisition for all children and all languages. At older ages, most
children add additional abilities to memorize rules and profit from
explicit correction. But not all do. And these methods are of little
or no value for most kids before about 1st grade.
The flip side, with the same conclusion, as bonnie has said more than
once, is psychological. A kid won't wan't to learn how to write
correctly until after learning to want to write. I started out wanting
to teach Aaron good spelling, since I knew I had wasted so much time
correcting my own spelling throughout life. That made writing an
unpleasant ordeal for him, which he therefore avoided. After I was
talked into accepting Invented Spelling by his kindergarten teacher, I
dropped the matter, and he started to bloom as a writer. He later
decided on his own that it was better to try to learn to spell right.
- Bruce
|
418.32 | standard .ne. correct | INFRNO::RANDALL | self-defined person | Thu Oct 18 1990 10:52 | 39 |
| re: .30
You're right about the social consequences of standard usage.
However, you're confusing the standard imposed by the preferred
dialect with some kind of mythical correctness. If by some wave
of a magic wand the nation was converted into a country controlled
entirely by inner-city blacks, then we'd all be learning Black
English if we wanted to get ahead.
_The Elements of Style_ is an extremely valuable book, but it does
not define "correct" grammar. It's the opinion of Mr. White
(Strunk was the source, but as far as I know wasn't involved in
writing the book) about how standard US English should be written,
but it is not the only way or necessarily even the best way US
English should be written. If you take it as the Bible of usage,
you'll find that neither Hemingway nor Dickens, among dozens of
others, qualify as good writers. Granted that Strunk and White
had a lot of experience on which to base their opinions, White
also had his personal axes to grind and his personal views to
promote. Try reading some of his literary and social criticism,
and similar works by other writers at the time, and then reread
_The Elements of Style_, and notice how the hidden agenda comes
through.
Again, I'm not saying that he's wrong, or that his work isn't
valuable anyway -- you certainly won't go wrong following his
rules. But it's not the only way to write.
Even if one grants that White's rules are absolute, as Bruce
points out it doesn't follow that specific rote drilling in the
rules is the best way, or even a workable way, to teach it. I
happen to be able to learn grammar that way, but statistically I'm
in a considerable minority -- about 5 or 6 percent of the
population can learn grammar by having structures explained and
terms analyzed. But most of the remaining 95 percent of people --
the normal ones -- learn by doing and by exmaple, not by analysis
and drill.
--bonnie
|
418.33 | real time example . . . | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Thu Oct 18 1990 13:33 | 14 |
| Conversation last night on picking Eric (age 4) up at pre-school.
There were some pictures from a recent apple-picking field trip, in one
of which Eric was holding something:
Eric: I holded the log.
Dad: Oh, you held the log, did you?
Eric: Yes! I found the log and holded it.
My utterance here was shear force of (semi-obsessive) habit, not under
conscious control. But my noting awareness did record the sequence for
posterity. Not that his next transition has already begun, as we have
"found" rather than "finded."
- Bruce
|
418.34 | Slightly older... | DSSDEV::STEGNER | | Thu Oct 18 1990 17:34 | 6 |
| My sons are older (5 and 6-- almost 6 and 7). Now if one slips and
says, "I drawed this picture!" and I say, "You drew this picture by
yourself? It's beautiful!", he'll say, "Yes, I drew it all by
myself. You can hang it in your office, if you want..."
My office the art gallery. :-)
|
418.35 | Need To Speak or Write Well In Order To Get Job! | CURIE::POLAKOFF | | Mon Oct 22 1990 10:00 | 34 |
|
re:32
Bonnie,
I have read E.B. White's essays, books, and most recently, his letters.
While I agree with you that many writers would not qualify as using
correct grammar according to White--I still think that despite any
"hidden agenda"--he knew what he was talking about. I think that
Elements of Style is the best little book around and is invaluable when
needing a reference or claifying a point of grammar.
My point though is not Elements of Style. It is that while many people
may choose to use incorrect grammar--it is extremely important that
they know the difference--that they're making an informed choice.
Read anything by the "Beat Generation" of writers--their grammar and
intonations were in many cases, of their own making (ie: Burroughs,
Kerouac, etc.). But I've seen these guys on old tapes and in
interviews--and when discussing literary criticism--believe me--they
were quite well spoken and quite literate. The point being: they knew
the difference.
I don't want to go down a rathole here. My point is simply that in
order to make it in this world--and I mean--get a good-paying job that
one likes--support oneself and possibly a family, etc.--one must be
able to speak correctly, yes?
Again, if one chooses not to speak correctly--that's fine. But it is
still important that one knows the difference between the two.
Bonnie
|
418.36 | I'd rather have them think well | TLE::RANDALL | self-defined person | Mon Oct 22 1990 11:01 | 48 |
| re: .35
Of course it's important. I never said it wasn't. I never said
E.B. White wasn't a good writer, I said his wasn't the only
correct way or effective way to write. I just don't think parents
correcting our children's grammar and holding them to a rigid
conservative definition of writing excellence is an effective
technique for teaching them to write well.
How well spoken and well educated you are has nothing to do with
whether you're literate. With all the books that are available on
tape right now, everything from classics to current bestsellers,
it would be possible to have absorbed the thoughts and ideas of
the entire Western tradition, plus a pretty fair sampling of other
cultures, and explain the meanings and connections wonderfully in
an interview, and not be able to read a word or sign one's name.
The people who write well at any age are the ones who have
something they want to say, something that means a great deal to
them, who are willing to put in the work to learn how to say it as
well as possible. If you don't have anything to say, then you're
much less likely to consider writing as anything but a pain,
something to be avoided. I know adults who have changed their
fields of interest because what they wanted to do required too
much writing and they were convinced that since they couldn't
diagram sentences or identify an introductory clause, they didn't
have anything to say. Person after person gives that as a reason
why they're a read-only noter rather than a participant. "I can't
write well enough." And who taught them that? Probably lines of
parents and teachers red-pencilling their thoughts.
The quality of a piece of writing is only partly in the mechanics.
Most of it is in the quality of the thought it's expressing.
The way to teach our children to write well, or speak well, isn't
to correct the way they express their ideas. It's to encourage
them to discover the wonderful creative potential that's inside
each of us, encourage them to give voice to their own unique
vision, show them ways other writers have shaped other visions.
Then they'll learn their own voice, and as they learn that voice
and give it shape, they'll be ready to learn how to say it better.
All in all I'd much rather have my children secure in who they are
and what they want than to have forced them into society's mold
for the sake of getting a job that will let them buy more material
things.
--bonnie
|
418.37 | Let's limit the Inventive Spelling to the *children* | JAWS::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Mon Oct 22 1990 11:18 | 21 |
| ...in the classroom, that is. I'm grudgingly conceding the usefulness
of Inventive Spelling in a limited time frame (tail wag accompanied by
low growl). But around Columbus Day, Alex came home with a drawing of
a man on a ship, and the teacher's explanatory notes included the
ship's name: SANTA MARIEA [sic].
The head teacher was mortified when I teased her about it; turns out
that the culprit was a substitute teacher (still no excuse, but
mitigating I guess).
I pointed out, too (still in good humor; smile vs.grimace!) that a chart
posted on the wall listed a student named AlexandER WOLner.
Simple mistakes are understandable, but in a classroom (IMO) a major
effort should be made to spell posted words correctly. The ortho-
graphically-impaired have to live with the inconvenience of looking up
absolutely *everything* before presenting it as gospel to the children;
if that's too much bother, then they should restrict their share of the
classroom duties to those not requiring writing.
Leslie
|
418.38 | Ask A Kid Who Couldn't Make It | CURIE::POLAKOFF | | Mon Oct 22 1990 12:14 | 49 |
|
I taught in the Upward Bound program for 3 years when I was in my early
20s. I will never forget it. My kids were all bright, highly
motivated, but educationally disadvantaged. All of them were
college-bound...providing they could get decent scores on their SATs.
My job was to teach them writing, speaking, grammar, spelling, study
skills, listening skills--all the basics...in addition to getting them
through the SATs.
I had approximately 25 kids per year. I lived in a college dorm with
them for 6 weeks during the summer--during those 6 weeks, my students
worked literally day and night to try and come up to speed. During the
school year, I saw them after their regular school and on weekends.
They drove themselves very hard--these kids really wanted to go to
college.
Out of my 75 kids, only 4 were able to graduate from college. Only 35
made it into college and most of them ended up dropping out. I'm still
in touch with many of them and despite the reasons they cited back
then (needing money, being bored, not what they wanted, etc.) for
dropping out--many of them now concede that they didn't have the basic
skills they needed to stay in school and be successful.
Unfortunately, these kids came out of the worst schools in the Boston
City School system and by the time they were 17 and 18 years old, it
was too late for them to learn skills--such as proper grammar and
sentence structure--that they needed to succeed in college.
I will never forget one of my best and brightest and most creative
students--a young woman--who, in her yearbook, wrote that she wanted to
be a "nurc." She was one of my casualties. She got into B.U. on a
scholarship program, but ended up flunking out in her 2nd semester.
She had not fully matriculated into the B.U. program at that point--she
was still part of the special B.U. learning center--still taking
remedial courses in order to matriculate at some point. She flunked
out of the learning center. Today, she's married with a couple of
kids--but she still wants to be a nurse. Whether she will achieve that
goal, I don't know--but I do know that she is bitter about not being
taught correctly in the 1st place.
My experience has taught me that my kid(s) will know the difference
between proper English and whatever slang they choose to use. Again, I
have no problem with kids using slang or street talk. But they need to
know the difference. If they don't, it will follow them for the rest
of their lives and will impact on everything they do.
Bonnie
|
418.39 | How about a late grade schooler? | POWDML::SATOW | | Mon Oct 22 1990 14:14 | 56 |
| re: .0
I was so pround of myself that I spelled "grammar" correctly. Now I notice
that I made an error in the placement of the apostrophe. Arggggh. :^)
re: .37
One of the more sad aspects of the educational crisis in the United States is
that the people who go into teaching now are not the "cream of the crop". The
average SAT scores (sorry I can't give an exact figure, but I remember the
number shocking me) and average class standing of people who major in
education is _appalingly_ low. Unfortunately, it is no suprise to me that
there are teachers who are not exactly skilled at what they teach.
Particularly in light of the fact that a lot of them went to college at a time
when the emphasis was swinging away from fundamentals.
re: generally
I think that this discussion it fascinating as intellectual, and theoretical
excercise. One thing I now understand more clearly is why spelling and
grammar ought to be taught apart from creative expression. If you learn good
spelling and grammar, and it becomes engrained, then you can apply good
spelling and grammar to your writing more or less instinctively, without its
getting in your way. So while I generally agree with Bonnie R, I think that
if you work on the creative side at the expense of the "correctness" side,
then the child will eventually come up againt the problem that Bonnie P talks
about -- the quality of their thoughts getting discounted by the way in which
they are expressed.
I continue to assert that it is a matter of context and age. I think that at
a toddler level, that the creative side should be emphasied heavily,
and the "rules" side lightly or not at all. But when _should_ the "rules"
side start getting more emphasis?
To give a specific example, my daughter Lara is 10 and in the fifth grade.
She's starting to write stories of about two or three handwritten pages. I
review her homework. If it's, say, math, I ask her to go back and recalculate
the problems that she got wrong. I probably would do this anyway, but I'm
influenced somewhat by the fact that she has ADHD (though it's mostly the
AD = Attention Deficit rather than the H = Hyperactivity). She makes a lot of
errors that would ordinarily be classified as "careless". Some of the errors,
for example, are caused by her copying the problem incorrectly from the book.
Now what do I do if it's a piece of creative writing? She has learned
punctuation, at least periods at the end of a sentence. Spelling has always
been her weakest subject. What should do I do if a story she writes is full
of punctuation and spelling errors?
I look at the first draft of the essay. I discuss the content of the essay
and what she's trying to say. I note the punctuation and spelling errors and
ask her to correct them and recopy the paper -- which IMO she needs to do
anyway, because her handwriting on first drafts is quite sloppy.
Any comments?
Clay
|
418.40 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Mon Oct 22 1990 16:00 | 25 |
| In re: .39
As to "Kid's", you give yourself away, Clay. In the title of the
string, the possessive singular "kid's" makes reasonable sense, only in
reviewing .0's context is the error clear.
As to new teachers, what new teachers? In my system, there is scarcely
a single teacher (except a few specialists) with less than 10 years
experience. Of course that (the absence of new hiring) is largely why
few live wire students get education degrees these days. In about 10
years, a huge share of the current teachers will retire within a short
period, and we will suddently be in an immense pickle.
As to daughter's papers: I have already mentioned that I am a
congenitally poor speller, and ever grateful for spelling error
detectors. Have you thought about getting her to do her essays on
computer? It would eliminate the sloppy handwriting problem (though it
might be feared that it would also eliminate handwriting improvement).
Word processing makes it so much more painless to edit and revise
writing, skills that in handwritten form are usually neglected. Aaron
isn't quite old enough for real written assignments yet, so I don't
have my own experience with the appeal or effect of automation in upper
elementary grades. Can others comment?
- Bruce
|
418.41 | Sounds Like You're Doing The Right Thing... | CURIE::POLAKOFF | | Mon Oct 22 1990 17:24 | 85 |
|
Clay,
I am a horrible speller--really horrible. As I said in an earlier
note, I believe that spelling ability is inherited--either you have it
or you don't.
I was not the type of student who learned well in a classroom. Maybe I
had (have) ADD or something--who knew back then? I was classified as
an underachiever--careless--did things all the time like copy the wrong
math problem out of the book--screw up directions, etc. To this day, I
can't do math--have no head for numbers--yet my father got his B.S. in
math. Talk about a parent being mortified...
Anyway, my mother, who was the good speller in the family RELIGIOUSLY
went over my homework EACH AND EVERY night while I was in grade school.
I looked forward to our time together after dinner--my mother wasn't
critical about it--she just would go over my homework and help me when
things weren't right. She would go over and over and over my spelling
with me--she always corrected my grammar (again, from about 1st grade
on--which is what I will do with Hannah, if necessary)--and she
basically taught me to read. I was incapable of learning to read in
the classroom--didn't understand what the teacher was doing. I was in
the bottom reading group. By the time my mother got through with
me--and by mid-1st grade, I was in the top reading group--and to this
day, read a novel every week or two. Love to read.
So Clay, I would say that if you are going over your daughter's
homework in a non-threatening (ie: helpful) way--you are doing the
right thing--absolutely. I credit my mother with teaching me--over the
years--how to memorize the spelling of certain words--at least to the
point where I don't constantly embarass (sp?!) myself. Also, as I got
older, I got to be a better speller just from practice.
My dad, on the other hand, was absolutely horrendous. He would spell
things from purely sounding them out--some of his spelling was quite
creative and quite funny! But he was very well spoken, a good writer,
and quite literate. So....
Regarding the education of our teachers...from my experience with
Upward Bound--I believe most of my students had grounds for a class
action suit against the City of Boston. Their education (or lack of
it) was truly criminal. This is going back up to 15 years ago--and
from what I understand, the problem has gotten worse, not better. Of
course, there are a lot of mitigating factors when dealing with
inner-city schools--like lack of support from the administration,
out-of-control students, problem homes, drugs, violence, etc.--the
problems these days are far worse than they were when I taught Upward
Bound. I am certainly not advocating John Silber (believe me, I am not
advocating John Silber!), but I do think he is right on target in
Chelsea. Basically, his program calls for putting kids into "Head
Start" type programs around the age of 2-3 (under the guise of
"daycare"). This includes proper nutrition (giving them breakfast and
lunch), teaching numbers, colors, letters, etc. and basically, getting
them into a structured learning environment very early. His basic
premise is that once a child reaches the old age of 6--and has not had
the basics (proper nutrition, home support, letters, numbers,
etc.)--it's basically too late. That child gets lost in the
system--and I agree.
I also think that our current crop of teachers aren't so terrible. The
problem, I think, is the system. Sure, there are born "teachers,"
those people who really love what they do and are good at it. But like
any profession, there are those that have natural talent and then there
are those that have to work at it. I think that many of our teachers
are discouraged, burned-out, disinterested--because they are not valued
in terms of money or respect--by our society. It's unfortunate, but
true. Granted, there are bad teachers out there--but on the whole, I
think most of them are decent folks who honestly try. Even the best
schools in the state have much lower SAT scores than when most of us
went to school. It's a real problem. I think our entire educational
system is falling apart. I do believe that real learning does go on in
some of our better private schools--and those teachers are some of the
lowest paid individuals around. I think they are highly motivated and
dedicated and respected. It would do the public school system good to
do a study on what makes these folks tick--and try and copy it in the
public schools.
Well, I didn't intend to go on like this. As you can see, education is
a subject I'm quite passionate about.
Bonnie
|
418.42 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Oct 23 1990 10:27 | 10 |
| re .41:
Bonnie, it sounds to me like you have the classic symptoms of dyslexia --
great difficulty in spelling and math, and an inability to learn to read
using the look-say method. I would guess that your mother used some
kind of phonics method to teach you to read.
Since dyslexia and ADD are often hereditary, you might be interested in
the learning disabilities conference (KP7 or SELECT to add it to your
notebook).
|
418.43 | Left Handed Have Anything To Do With It? | CURIE::POLAKOFF | | Wed Oct 24 1990 10:39 | 26 |
|
Gerald,
This is not a cop-out, but I honestly don't have the time to be active
in more than 1 notesfile, although the topic of learning disabilities
interests me greatly.
I've always assumed that left-handedness has a lot to do with inability
to learn in a standard, rote way.
I am very concerned, because it appears that Hannah is left-handed. I
absolutely DO NOT want her going through what I went through in school
and I am worried (possibly paranoid?).
Also, forgive my ignorance, but if I'm dyslexic, then why don't I see
letters backwards? I always thought that was the telltale sign...
It appears that Hannah sees her letter correctly--she is already
showing great interest in identifying letters and numbers and can
identify most of the letters in the alphabet. She is also teaching
herself to write her name--and she's not doing is backwards.
Anyway, I wonder how much "handedness" has to do with learning
standardized learning ability?
Bonnie
|
418.44 | | TCC::HEFFEL | That was Zen; This is Tao. | Wed Oct 24 1990 11:59 | 4 |
| Bonnie, I believe that there are many forms of dyslexia. Of which the
classic backwards or swtiched letters is only the most well known.
Tracey
|
418.45 | you learn to cope | TLE::RANDALL | self-defined person | Wed Oct 24 1990 13:04 | 21 |
| Also, unless you're seriously handicapped, by the time you're an
adult, you've learned to cope with most of the symptoms of various
forms of dyslexia, so that even experts can't say for sure if you
really perceive things differently. I'm "probably" dyslexic --
after several days of tests, this was the best they could come up
with, and their conclusions were based on one piece of evidence:
that I have a terrible time with rear-view mirrors or other mirror
images. The mirror image "looks" "right". If I rely too much on
the rear-view mirrors, I'll turn the car the wrong direction every
time.
And I really think that many of the perceptual differences
labelled as "learning disabilities" are not disabilities but
different ways of looking at the world. When the material is
presented in the way YOU percieve -- for instance, learning by
hearing, or by doing, rather than by reading -- instead of the way
the school system thinks you SHOULD percieve, or the way the
majority percieves, so many of us don't have any problem with
learning or with intelligence.
--bonnie
|
418.47 | now where did I put that word? | TLE::RANDALL | self-defined person | Wed Oct 24 1990 13:10 | 8 |
| re: .46
Yes, that's what they told me when I was tested, too.
The good thing is that people with ambidextrous brains tend to be
very creative :) :)
--bonnie
|
418.46 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Oct 24 1990 13:13 | 19 |
| re .43, .44:
Most dyslexics (at least according to the medical establishment's definition)
probably don't reverse letters or even swap letters in a word. Dyslexia
doesn't even necessarily involve reading or writing -- there are forms
of dyslexia that involve hearing and speaking. I'm convinced that George
Bush is dyslexic; according to Barbara Bush, one of their sons is.
There does seem to be a link between left-handedness and dyslexia,
although there are obviously lots of right-handed dyslexics and
lots of left-handed non-dyslexics. According to currently accepted
theories, dyslexia is a result of a sort of ambidextrous brain --
instead of one side of the brain dominating in language activities,
both sides are strong, resulting in crossed signals.
re .45:
My wife, who's dyslexic and has trained to teach dyslexics, prefers
the term "teaching disabilities" to "learning disabilities."
|
418.48 | Fewer "Created" Disabilities | POWDML::SATOW | | Wed Oct 24 1990 13:57 | 18 |
| I think that a lot of the "learning disabilities" that used to be present in
left handed people have to do with the fact that they were encouraged, or
forced, to do things in unnatural ways -- sometimes to the point of making them
write right handed. That's a pretty sure prescription for creating an
artificial "learning disability". Etymololgy alone tells you that left
handedness has had a lot of negativism attached to it -- ("droit" = right,
"gauche" = left, "dextra" = right handed, "sinistra" = left handed).
Though there are still difficulties for left handed kids, such as desks,
spiral notebooks, scissors, etc., I would hope we're beyond trying to fight
nature now. So while there may be some correlation, as Gerald has noted, at
least there aren't so many "artificial" learning disabilities.
re: Learning_Disabilities Conference. It isn't a real active one. Once you
get through reading all the notes that you are interested in, checking it once
a week is quite sufficient to keep up.
Clay
|
418.49 | We're digressing | GEMVAX::WARREN | | Wed Oct 24 1990 14:08 | 3 |
| Maybe we should start new notes (if they don't exist already) on
learning disabilities and left-handedness.
|
418.50 | Are School Systems More Liberal Now? | CURIE::POLAKOFF | | Wed Oct 24 1990 14:53 | 16 |
|
Bonnie,
I agree with you completely about different ways to learn. I am
certainly an example of that--as I'm sure many of us are.
The problem really is the school system and our children. Unless they
learn to conform, they will be destined to be thwarted, frustrated,
disinterested, and bored. Not to mention the number it will do to
their sense of self-esteem and to their ego. I don't know--maybe the
shcool system has changed since I was in it--maybe they're more
accepting and less judgemental and stringent about learning a certain
way. Has anyone had direct experience?
Bonnie
|
418.51 | a rambling nonanswer | TLE::RANDALL | self-defined person | Thu Oct 25 1990 10:29 | 65 |
| Bonnie,
Every school system is different. Some are very rigid, some are
very flexible, some are very experimental with new techniques, and
some are deeply committed to going "back to the basics." Every
approach will be very right for some children and very wrong for
others, and even in the worst school system you can stumble across
the perfect teacher, or draw a lemon in the best system.
So anything I could tell you about our experiences with our kids
in the Nashua school system might or might not apply to your
school system or your child. Kat is by nature disciplined and
orderly. She likes to know what she's supposed to do and what the
limits are. She's been very successful in traditional classrooms.
Steven is creative, inquisitive, and undisciplined, and while he
prefers to have a routine, within that routine he needs a lot of
control over what he does when. And so far the teacher has been
encouraging him to do supplemental things to take advantage of his
creativity. I don't know what would happen if he had to just sit
when he was done with his papers.
I am all but positive that the idea of forcing a left-handed child
to write with the right hand is a thing of the past. All of Kat's
classes had left-handed scissors available for crafts -- Kat is,
like me, partially ambidextrous and always preferred the lefty
kind -- and most of the desks at her school were the square table
kind that don't have a right or a left.
They also seem to be more flexible about inclinding the kids'
experiences into their lessons. One of Kat's friends in the lower
grades was on crutches from spina bifida; the teacher was
flexible about how long it took her to get from class to lunch and
so on, and took time in the classroom to deal with some of the
issues of the physically handicapped even though that wasn't on
his lesson plan. And with 28 different languages spoken in the
homes of Nashua's schoolchildren, the issues of English as a
second language are part of every day's instruction.
With both kids I'm taking steps to make sure that they know that
while school is important, it's not the only thing in the world so
their self-esteem doesn't depend entirely on what classmates and
this year's teacher think of them. They've both participated in
athletic activities they enjoy (gymnastics, little league, and now
dance for Kat) and in music, and Neil and I make sure they know
that reading and writing and so on are activities that adults use
all the time, not just devices teachers invented to torture
children. Steven has lots of art supplies at home, and the time
and freedom to draw whatever he wants (you should see the collage
he made from a fist-sized rock and a handful of anthracite coal
pebbles. . . )
I guess the only answer is to be aware of your own child's
personality and learning style, and of what the school system is
doing and what the teacher's attitudes are, and make sure that
what you're doing is reinforcing the child, not the bad messages
from school.
It doesn't matter how good the system sounds on paper, it might
not match a particular child. For instance, I think in general
open-concept classrooms, with activity areas and so on, produce
happier more creative children who learn more and know how to
apply it. But Kat did not do well in that kind of environment.
She needed more structure.
--bonnie
|
418.52 | And when the kid corrects mom! | CSC32::WILCOX | Back in the High Life, Again | Thu Oct 25 1990 12:06 | 9 |
| Well, how embarrassing to have the child correct mom's grammar!
Kathryne (3) and I were watching Cinderella the other night and
I said something about the "mice". She promptly informed me,
"those aren't mice, they're mouses!"
Sheeeesh, she did it twice!
Liz
|
418.53 | one source of difference | TLE::RANDALL | self-defined person | Thu Oct 25 1990 12:58 | 28 |
| This morning while I was doing something else, I realized that one
source of the Bonnie and bonnie disagreement was our definition of
"good jobs."
I'm from the same general economic and social class as Bonnie's
Outward Bound students. Rural rather than urban, but lower middle
class and ethnic. When I talk about a good job, I'm thinking of
something that pays a steady wage. Flipping hamburgers at
McDonald's is NOT an emblem of failure where I'm from; it's not
success, but it's better than a lot of friends and neighbors will
be doing. If you can advance to shift supervisor, or land a job
cooking for a real restaurant, that's approaching success.
Careers, like being a mechanic or a bank clerk, are rarer still
and harder to come by.
E. B. White would be laughed out of your basic restaurant kitchen.
Which does not mean, as I have stressed repeatedly, that we don't
understand language, care about learning, or not wish to express
ourselves clearly. Or that grammar shouldn't be taught in school,
in connection with writing. But it's not a critical factor in
what we consider important in our lives, the way it is if you
think of a college education as the norm.
This doesn't mean either way of looking at the world is right or
wrong, only that it changes your perspective.
--bonnie
|
418.54 | xref: left handed conference | RANGER::PEACOCK | Freedom is not free! | Thu Oct 25 1990 13:41 | 7 |
| While I don't read it all that regularly anymore, there is already
a left-handed conference that may provide some of the answers you
are seeking:
IOSG::LEFT_HANDERS
- Tom
|
418.55 | Arrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrgh! | DSSDEV::STEGNER | | Mon Oct 29 1990 11:08 | 8 |
| I heard some great grammar this weekend...
I called to get some pizza delivered, and told the man (in his 20's)
that I wanted to place an order.
"Whatcha be wantin'?"
I should've replied, " I be wantin' a pizza!" :-)
|
418.56 | yep, that's BED | TLE::RANDALL | self-defined person | Mon Oct 29 1990 11:28 | 12 |
| re: .55
That would have been the correct answer. "I be wantin' a
pepperoni pizza" (assuming that pepperoni was the flavor you
wanted) would have been even better.
That's an example of what the linguists call "Black English
Dialect", which would probably be more correctly called "Urban
English" -- it's the dialect of choice for conversation in most
cities, even one as small as Nashua.
--bonnie
|
418.57 | Upward Bound | CURIE::POLAKOFF | | Mon Oct 29 1990 13:43 | 16 |
|
Actually Bonnie, I taught "Upward Bound," not "Outward Bound." Upward
Bound is a program (or WAS a program) that takes highly motivated,
inner-city kids and puts them in an intensive college prepatory program
for a year. I could have never taught Outward Bound--I would have
chickened out at the sight of a rope across two trees (I am king
klutz)!
Speaking of inner-city dialect--back maybe 10 years ago, one of my
students said to me--after a particularly trying lesson....
"Why Snap Ms. P., you done activated my dome."
Bonnie
|
418.58 | | POWDML::SATOW | | Mon Oct 29 1990 17:26 | 8 |
| re: .57
> "Why Snap Ms. P., you done activated my dome."
I looooooooooove it!!!
Clay
|