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Tuesday, December 02, 2014

Truths Obscuring Truths

So this meme popped up on one of my social media feeds this morning.

Even though the statement is true, it's not really a fair statement.

It was posted by another writing instructor, and I certainly understand the sentiment, especially on those days when my students' writing is less-than-inspiring.

It's a nice example of how a little truth can feel right, but still obscure a larger and more important truth.

Or in this case, two larger truths.

My first response to this meme was based on the history of our education system. Because the other side of this fact is that in the past 100 years, we have extended the opportunity of education to a much larger part of the population. 100 years ago, most white people got an education. According to the National Center for Education Statistics, only 5% of white people were illiterate in 1910. In comparison, 30.5% of non-whites were illiterate. By 1979, those numbers dropped to 0.6% and 1.6% respectively.

When compared to the one from 100 years ago, our education system today does more for more people. It is far from perfect, and no one should be complacent. However, just because rich white people used to know Latin, doesn't mean our society is sliding into disrepair.

And what about that Latin and Greek?

That question is what prompted my second response.

You know why we used to teach Latin and Ancient Greek? Because those languages are hard to learn. We used to think the brain worked like our bicep - if you make it work hard, then it will get stronger.

Then we realized that was incorrect. That argument was part of what led to the creation of the Modern Language Association. Today, the only people who need to study those languages are people who want to study the Classics. That's not a bad thing. It leaves more room for people to study languages that are still spoken today.

That response to the Classical languages is what led me to the other larger truth I think this meme obscures.

In the last few decades, researchers have demonstrated that direct instruction on grammar doesn't improve student writing.

Here's a quote from an concise summary of the research on this point:
Research over a period of nearly 90 years has consistently shown that the teaching of school grammar has little or no effect on students.
-George Hillocks & Michael Smith, 1991
Asking students to know terms such as subject, predicate, relative clause, appositive, or any other discipline-based term for describing text will not help them write. It will only help them describe texts in the same way scholars in writing studies describe texts.

Personally, I enjoy learning, using, and examining terms related to grammar and composition, because I like to analyze texts and talk about the writing process with people in my discipline. I think a lot of people who teach writing also enjoy that; which is probably behind the decision to make those skills the focus of so many writing classes.

But writing teachers should not be trying to teach students to talk about grammar using our specialized jargon. We should teach students how to compose texts.

I do think we should always push for higher standards, but I don't think making econ students diagram sentences is what those standards should look like.

So, while I think that meme is provocative, I also think it unfairly undermines what teachers, educators, and students are working to achieve.

3 comments:

Betsy G said...

Thank you for continuing to write what goes through my mind when I see memes like this! My first thought was just what you said here, that in 1900 HIGH SCHOOL was for the elite, and college even more so. Today, college is a prerequisite for so many more jobs, and yet high schools are forced to prepare students for high stakes standardized tests, not college or real-world writing.

Rob said...

Yep, what Betsy said. I've encountered this meme too and addressed it the same way you did. It's "technically" true but it's not only unfair, it is also inaccurate, representing only a portion of the truth that it belongs to. It's meant to belittle the present, modern education, and hearken to a nostalgic past that never actually was. There was never a time Americans as a whole walked around waxing poetic in Greek or Latin! The mere notion is hysterical. So lame.

Hogan said...

What is doubly difficult is that the lack of public support for educators often pushes us to feel this way ourselves.

This post came from a friend of mine who is a great thinker. Someone I'm sure is a great teacher. This frustration with the system, however, is understandable.

It seems the harder we work the more we encounter voices seeking to undercut that work.

On the FB thread, the person who posted this engaged in a discussion that showed his understanding of the nuance behind this meme, but how many meme readers are going to go to that length?