The More Things Change...Rethinking the Most Recent Rumors of Literacy Crises
Most people seem to think about language the way they think about teen pregnancy. They think of it only as a problem. At least, that is how they sound.
English is in trouble, or so the argument runs.
Eighth graders can’t speak or write in their first language, no one knows what
a modal is, and the apostrophe is an endangered punctuation mark. (So is the
comma, though its case is beyond saving.)
Add to these items, of course, the usual
observations about teens and text messaging, Internet-chatting, movie-going and
the like, along with their lack of reading, and it would appear that we are
indeed staring down the barrels of a crisis never seen before. Usually in these
arguments, language study is summed up in the rules listed in Strunk and
White’s The Elements of Style. In this
account, there seems to be little difference between learning to use “correct”
English and getting the instructions right on a new toaster.
But I don’t think that we are in a crisis of the
proportions currently being imagined. Rather, the more things have changed, the
more they have stayed the same.
Those objecting to the way that young people use
the language today should first consider the kind of evidence that is marshaled
to prove that there is a literacy crisis. People who argue that students today
are poorer writers than students were in the past are basing their argument mostly
on what appears to be nostalgia. Or sometimes they will pit today’s student
papers against a novel by, say, Ernest Hemingway or Katherine Ann Porter. (This
is not fair, considering both writers had editors.) In fact, this argument is
based on a lack of historical knowledge. And as we all are familiar with the
maxim about ignorance of history, a remedy seems in order. Our ignorance of the
past means that we might be doomed to repeat it, and this is certainly borne
out in the ongoing literacy crises repeated over the last 150 years.
One such crisis came out in the 1870s, when the
first Civil War veterans were admitted to some of the elite American colleges.
Robert Connors and James Berlin both note that these students were unprepared, as were the colleges admitting them on more open terms.
Some of these first generation college students could not write in Standard
English. The new openness led to new concerns about literacy and the invention
of a new college course, Freshman writing, the only general elective at
Harvard.
As the United States culture continued to change,
with immigrant populations, moves from rural to urban centers, and more people
wanting to go to school, English departments engaged in serious debate
throughout much of the 20th century on whether or not grammar should
be taught and how it should be taught.
The result today is that it is possible to read
some of the student papers they published in journals like College English to make their arguments that student writing was
getting worse, and training in grammar should be the basis for all
college-level writing instruction. Those papers are interesting, for as I read
them today they lead me to the suspicion that nothing has changed. 18 year olds
in 1926 seemed to make the same kind of sentence level errors that 18 year olds
make today. Of interest is that these are the bad student writers that some
teacher selected to clinch an argument about teaching grammar in 1926. It might
be assumed that these papers are representative of the problems with usage,
spelling, punctuation, grammar, and format typical of students at the time. The
similarities between these jazz era student papers and the papers my students
who struggle the most to write suggest that there has been no decline.
English teachers engaged in the debate about
grammar and teaching writing for decades. But this debate has never been
settled for the larger, general public, and when it comes to concerns with
language, most of us tend to follow our initial convictions and rely on what
seems the most intuitively correct evidence. This seems to be behind the
assertions that poor student writing and language use is the result of TV and
movie viewing, and more recently, texting.
Consider that in 1939, W. Alan Grove, an English
teacher, wrote in College English that
critics of the decline in literacy attributed the decline in student writing
ability to “the comedians, sports commentators, and crooners of radio and
movie.”
Again, it would seem that the more things change,
the more they stay the same. When trouble seems to appear again, we seem ready
and willing to round up all the usual suspects again. The trouble is, with
these ongoing debates about a literacy crisis, we don’t seem to be aware that
we are repeating the same episodes seen before. And sometimes the repetition ends in unfortunate programs like No Child Left Behind.
At the very least, it would appear that it is
the literacy crises that should be questioned. All of them. We should pay attention to the comparisons we are using to make our
points. Comparing the way young people use
the language to adult novelists who have been intensely involved in language
use for more years than the young have been alive is simply not fair. We might as well base a
traffic crisis on comparing the way that 16 year olds drive to the way that
their parents do.
In language, we don’t see the unfairness because
we don’t understand the developmental qualities of language acquisition. We
take a positivist assumption that if material is covered in class—in this case,
grammar lessons—then that is all that needs to be done.
If the question of correctness among our youngest
users of the language were all there were to the story, I’d suggest we follow W. Alan Grove's suggestion and pass a
law now that requires all sports announcers to at least understand the content
of an upper level linguistics course. In fact, given all the "reforming" that has been done to all levels of education, all of it without attending to social forces, this might be the next step in what we call "education reform." Require anyone with a speaking role
in the media to speak English as well as Jerry Seinfeld. If they can’t, they’re
out of the spotlight. It would be as simple as that.
Sports announcers are generally annoying, for a number of reasons,
and most of them get their jobs, not because of their command of the English
language, but because they were a successful quarterback, or they are outrageously
colorful, or because they help to raise TV ratings for their shows. But they will never face the regulations and upbraiding from the voting public that teachers get.
And finally, I agree that there is no reason to make them pay attention
to their English.
Labels: Internet effects on writing, literacy, literacy crises
2 Comments:
So what does this mean for a Freshman Writing professor?
Ichorous, that is an important question, one I talk with Composition specialists every year at conferences. Many who think about this want to do away with Freshman Writing courses, especially in colleges and universities where it is assumed they will do all the work of teaching writing. Instead of First Year writing, we should have writing programs, with students learning to write at every level. At schools like APU, where theology and biology professors stop me and say, "Why isn't FWS doing it's job? You haven't taught my students to write," it is especially problematic. They are saying that writing is not part of the intellectual work of the university, that FWS is remedial, and students should know how to write already.
Obviously, I am convinced that writing is developmental, that an FWS class cannot teach writing in genres that students will encounter for the first time in their 300 level psychology courses. But First Year writing teachers can introduce students to writing for the university.
I'm sure, Wes, that this is more than you wanted to be told. Suffice it to say, Freshman Writing is a controversial course among Composition specialists, especially when you consider its origins and its rationale.
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