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The sad, sad state of college English
The Examiner ^ | 14 Nov 2008 | Michael Olesker

Posted on 11/19/2008 10:26:50 AM PST by BGHater

Some people collect sports memorabilia, or rare coins, or sea shells from the beach at Ocean City. Wilson Watson collects sentences.

He taught local community college students for 35 years and has now slipped gently into retirement. But his students’ sentences trail behind him like ship’s anchors, evidence of the sinking of American writing skills.

Or, as one of Watson’s scholars wrote so succinctly: “Some people use bad language and is not even aware of the fact.”

Or, another: “It’s good I’m doing something with my self; Therefore, I can do better in the foochure.”

Or, “People who murder a lot of people are called masked murderers.”

Some of this feels like masked murder of the English language — such as the student who explained in a note, “I was absent on Monday because I was stopped on the Beltway for erotic driving.”

Watson taught English at Catonsville Community College — now the Catonsville branch of the Community College of Baltimore County — and through the years was occasionally amused and sometimes appalled at his students’ writing. Eventually, he started jotting down their sentences and holding onto them.

“Understand,” he says, “this is not just Catonsville I’m talking about. Through the years, I’d talk with colleagues all over the state. They all had the same stories. We’d ask each other, ‘What’s happened to writing? What’s happened to language?’”

You want more examples? How about these beauties: • “The person was an innocent by standard, who just happened to be the victim of your friend’s careless responsibility.” • “Society has moved toward cereal killers.” • “Romeo and Juliet exchanged their vowels.” • “Willie Loman put Biff on a petal stool.” • “Another effect of smoking is it may give you cancer of the thought.” • “The children of lesbian couples receive as much neutering as those of other couples."

Or, when asked to use the past tense of “fly” in a sentence: “I flought to Chicago.”

Some sentences reflect a lack not only of basic thought, but also of historical awareness. Such as: • “Benjamin Franklin discovered America while fling a kite.” • “Christopher Columbus sailed all over the world until he found Ohio.” • “Many attempt to blame Kurt Schmoke for the decline in the population, yet Donald Schaefer suffered the same oral deal.” • “Michaelangelo painted the ceiling of the Sixteenth Chapel.”

“All these sentences,” Watson says, “were written by college students who were not intending to be funny. But they don’t read much any more, and they haven’t had much exposure to language. And it’s gotten worse over the years.

“The thing that’s really concerned many of us is the inability of many students to think clearly. It’s reflected in their writing. Some of it’s just gibberish. It reads as if written by someone for whom English is a second language, with mixed-up phrases and ideas. You ask them what they mean, and they can’t tell you verbally, either.”

The result is students saying things they clearly don’t intend to say, or spelling things that make their sentences take on entirely new meanings. For example: • “Keith helps me to have good self-a-steam.” • “For example, one homeless person lives under a bride in Lanham, Md.” • “Jogging on a woman’s ovaries can be dangerous to her health.” • “Including snakes, most people consume six meals a day.” • “The French benefits of this job are good.” • “Christopher Columbus discovered America while sailing in Spain.”

“Most students,” says Watson, “make it clear that they don’t like to read, and they don’t want to read. Many struggled tremendously with their reading. So they just wouldn’t do it. And yet it’s so important.

“When you read, you get to see the language used correctly, and you’re exposed to a range of vocabulary far beyond your own. I listen to students today, and the number of words they use is limited to slang and colloquialisms.

“Also, we live in a culture where everything moves so quickly that you don’t have time to think about it. Reading lets you slow things down and think about them. But, because they don’t want to read, you get sentences like these.” • “Jogging is excellent exercise anywhere, but I prefer to jog in a warm climax.” • “My brother and I took a fairy across to Martha’s Vineyard.” • “A very good thing for your health is the Arabic exercise.”

“I should point out,” says Watson, “that there are differences in students. Adult students — of whom there are many — are very willing to do the kind of work you need to do. They’ve had experience in the workplace and know what it takes to succeed.

“And international students — from Russia, from Africa, from the Middle East — they really, really work hard.”


TOPICS: Books/Literature; Education
KEYWORDS: college; editorial; education; english; learning; teaching
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1 posted on 11/19/2008 10:26:50 AM PST by BGHater
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To: BGHater

The language is spoken. Writing is written.


2 posted on 11/19/2008 10:31:05 AM PST by RightWhale (Exxon Suxx)
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To: BGHater

Check out some of the vanity posts here for “interesting” grammar. Yowsa!


3 posted on 11/19/2008 10:31:14 AM PST by Monsieur Poirot
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To: BGHater

er...wots rong with that?


4 posted on 11/19/2008 10:31:25 AM PST by vimto (To do the right thing you don't have to be intelligent - you have to be brave (Sasz))
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To: BGHater

What has happened is that spell check gives the word it THINKS you are trying to use and they pick it. The wrong one.

As for the grammar, well, there is just no excuse.

But in my quick jots on FR, I sometimes fumble the english language myself. But if I were to turn in a paper in English, you better believe it would checked and double checked.


5 posted on 11/19/2008 10:32:25 AM PST by autumnraine (Churchill: " we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall never surrender")
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To: BGHater

This is just awefull!


6 posted on 11/19/2008 10:33:02 AM PST by joseph20 (...to ourselves and our Posterity...)
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To: BGHater

Two places to start: outlaw cell phones for children under 18 years old; do NOT hire teachers whose only qualification is a bachelor’s in “education”.


7 posted on 11/19/2008 10:33:14 AM PST by 13Sisters76 ("It is amazing how many people mistake a certain hip snideness for sophistication. " Thos. Sowell)
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To: BGHater

I bet those kids know how to put a condom on a banana though!


8 posted on 11/19/2008 10:33:46 AM PST by BurbankKarl (a)
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To: BGHater

“Jogging is excellent exercise anywhere, but I prefer to jog in a warm climax”

Well, I’m usually exercising in a warm climax too, but it ain’t jogging I’m doing.


9 posted on 11/19/2008 10:34:52 AM PST by autumnraine (Churchill: " we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall never surrender")
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To: BGHater

“I flought to Chicago.”

OMG.


10 posted on 11/19/2008 10:35:05 AM PST by Attention Surplus Disorder (Our government is an edifice of artifice.)
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To: BGHater

“And international students — from Russia, from Africa, from the Middle East — they really, really work hard.”

Did they cross a BOARDER to get here?


11 posted on 11/19/2008 10:35:23 AM PST by DancesWithBolsheviks (This is no time to be a productive and self sufficient citizen.)
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To: BGHater

It’s cruel to make fun of Democratic Underground when they aren’t even capable of reading the jabs...


12 posted on 11/19/2008 10:36:18 AM PST by aWolverine
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To: joseph20

Truely awefull, what loosers.


13 posted on 11/19/2008 10:38:53 AM PST by word_warrior_bob (You can now see my amazing doggie and new puppy on my homepage!! Come say hello to Jake & Sonny)
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To: BGHater

>“Including snakes, most people consume six meals a day.”

Yep, I just got through devouring a Diamondback for brunch.


14 posted on 11/19/2008 10:39:22 AM PST by OneWingedShark (Q: Why am I here? A: To do Justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with my God.)
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To: Tax-chick; BGHater
Photobucket
15 posted on 11/19/2008 10:39:30 AM PST by martin_fierro (< |:)~)
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To: BGHater

Can’t respond.

Too depressed.


16 posted on 11/19/2008 10:39:45 AM PST by WayneS (Respect the 2nd Amendment; Repeal the 16th)
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To: autumnraine

I do believe that the computer has aided the fall of the English prose. I look at the various writings of our founding fathers and I’m left in awe.


17 posted on 11/19/2008 10:42:15 AM PST by BGHater (The GOP, the new DNC.)
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To: BGHater

Stuned. Loosers.


18 posted on 11/19/2008 10:43:32 AM PST by ichabod1 (You won't know obammunism is here until it puts a boot in your (fat) bottom.)
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To: BGHater

Do you suppose there is a nascent resentment in the American psyche that English is the “national” language?

Perhaps after the Revolutionary War, the USA should have replaced English with French or Latin - that would have increased scholarship!!!!!!!!!!

Or....the English should charge royalties for its most illustrious contribution to mankind.

I’m serious;)


19 posted on 11/19/2008 10:45:07 AM PST by sodpoodle (Man studies evolution to understand His creation.)
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To: BGHater
I read in an AP-Obama (formerly AP) article a couple of days back, forget which, where it said " he should have went.."

Now I know this sort of language is not uncommon among school dropouts, but AP-Obama ??

20 posted on 11/19/2008 10:45:16 AM PST by libh8er
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