Sunday, June 13, 2010

Why Johnny Can't Use Good Grammar by Mark Pennington

Some years back, the principal walked into my room while my student teacher was delivering a lesson. After a few minutes, the principal signaled me to step outside.
"I would never hire Johnny to work at my school," he said.
Shocked, I asked him why.
"On the board, he has a misplaced comma, and he ended a sentence with a preposition."

Sounds quite harsh, doesn't it? That principal certainly had high expectations of his
teachers. Not every educated adult places the same level of importance regarding the proper use of grammar and mechanics as does that principal. However, many do.

Proper grammar is a critically important tool for success in school, work, and life. We are judged, sometimes quite severely, by the words we use and the way we use them in both our speaking and writing. Misused grammar betrays us. The way we talk and write reflects our background, education, and ability to communicate.

The Five Myths of Grammar Instruction

1. Grammar is acquired naturally; it does not need to be taught. Oral language is not always an efficient teacher. In fact, it can be quite a mixed bag. For every proper modeling of the pronoun in the sentence: It is I, students hear at least five models of the incorrect: It is me. Grammar as it is caught must be complemented by a grammar that is taught.

2. Grammar is a meaningless collection of rules-most of which don't work half the time. This myth may have developed from mindless "drill and kill" grammatical exercises with no application to real writing. Actually, our English grammar is remarkably flexible and consistent.

3. Grammar cannot be learned by students with some learning styles or disabilities.
While it may be true that students learn language differently, at different rates, and vary in proficiency, there has been no research to show that some students cannot learn grammar.

4. English grammar cannot be learned by second language learners. Some teachers think that students who speak other languages get confused between the primary language and English grammars. The research proves otherwise. Intuitively, many of us have significantly increased our own knowledge of English grammar by taking a foreign language.

5. Reading and writing a lot will improve grammar. Reading grammatically rich literature is wonderful, but learning is not passive and does not come by osmosis. Writing poorly may, indeed, reinforce poor grammatical usage.

How we should teach grammar to Johnny...

Don't waste time teaching Johnny what he already knows. Find out what he does not know and target these areas of grammatical deficits. Use a good diagnostic assessment found on the web or at your local bookstore. Have Johnny practice those weaknesses with specific skill worksheets.

Teach the language of grammar and recognition of the common grammatical structures. Johnny has to know what a prepositional phrase is and how to know one when he sees one. In fact, over 30% of academic writing is composed of this grammatical form. Maybe learning "Conjunction Junction, What's Your Function" on Sesame Street® was not such a bad idea after all.

Teach grammar in the context of writing. Using the common grammatical structures, have Johnny begin half of his written sentences with different sentence openers. This practice serves two purposes: It teaches recognition and manipulation of grammatical structures and it improves sentence variety.

Mark Pennington is an educational author, presenter, reading specialist, and middle school teacher. Mark is committed to differentiated instruction for the diverse needs of today's students. Visit Mark's website at http://www.penningtonpublishing.com to check out his free teacher resources on grammar instruction and his books: Teaching Reading Strategies, Teaching Essay Strategies, Teaching Grammar and Mechanics, and Teaching Spelling and Vocabulary.

3 comments:

William Wood Field said...

I’m amazed that you would be shocked at a principal’s insistence on hiring a properly educated teacher. Why is that shocking to you? Shouldn’t competency in spelling and grammar be reasonable expectations for freshly-minted educators? Why would anyone hire a semi-literate person to be a teacher?

Years ago I worked for a manager who lacked spelling and grammatical skills. His secretary corrected his writing as a favor to him. He, however, objected to her efforts, and insisted that she type his memos “as written.” After that, it took less than ninety days before upper management was easing that illiterate manager out the door.

There is a lesson here. Rather than be shocked at some pedantic insistence upon competence, it may be more useful to test for competence in spelling and grammar by having job candidates write a short essay. Then hire only those who can spell and those who can use grammar properly. The others will find useful outlets for their illiteracy on internet sports “comments” pages or on Facebook pages.

張孟勳 said...

你不能和一個握緊的拳頭握手........................................

SadeRa盈君iford0412 said...

I guess I will need a lot.................................................................