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To: SWAMPSNIPER

Plus you didn’t have teachers who felt it was more important to be sure you had high self-esteem than to correct your spelling. I can remember papers having all sorts of corrections marked in red ink, and whenever they occurred, not just when spelling was stressed. Nowadays some school districts have even banned the dreaded “red pen” for fear of making kiddies feel badly about themselves.

When my kids were going through school, the teachers tolerated “creative” spelling so it would supposedly not interfere with their “creative” writing. But the way I learned to spell was largely on recognition and repetition and if I had been allowed to repeatedly misspell words, my mind would have imprinted it to be a stumbling block the rest of my life.

I, too, grew up in an atmosphere where you learned to spell correctly. Voracious reading also taught me a lot about our marvelous language. I am currently going through Richard Mitchell’s “Crazy Fractured English” again. I love Mitchell’s books skewering pompous English bloviating and Edwin Newman’s book on the same subject. English is a fascinating, creative language and if we “simplified” the spelling, we would lose the ability to figure out what the words mean because the spelling is a sign of which language contributed the word. It would be a tremendous loss and pretty confusing.

By the way, I love your photos.


23 posted on 06/04/2010 9:33:25 PM PDT by caseinpoint (Don't get thickly involved in thin things)
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To: caseinpoint
Thanks.

I remember kids who obviously didn't hear good English at home being corrected, over and over, until they got it right. Teachers don't do that now, I know of teachers with language problems.

Words are the tools you use to form concepts, as much as to communicate with others. A limited language isn't going to create many deep thinkers.

30 posted on 06/04/2010 9:50:22 PM PDT by SWAMPSNIPER (The Second Amendment, A Matter Of Fact, Not A Matter Of Opinion)
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To: caseinpoint
They dropped the ball when they didn't make that the 1st draft.
44 posted on 06/05/2010 1:24:02 AM PDT by Domangart
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To: caseinpoint
making kiddies feel badly about themselves

I'm more and more convinced that this repugnant practice is more harmful than anyone thinks. It doesn't improve self-esteem, whatever that is, it fails to instill humility. Moreover, you can't serve children a sh1t sandwich and tell'em it's chocolate. So, what they learn is that adults are idiots. This leads to cockiness, smart mouths, and that pathetic sense that they know more than anyone else when in reality they are callow and ignorant.

87 posted on 06/05/2010 11:28:11 AM PDT by ichabod1 (Meh, soccer. ItÂ’s just commie kickball.)
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