Gransnet forums

Pedants' corner

teachers bad grammer!

(69 Posts)
grandmaagain Wed 29-Jun-11 16:29:17

just returned home from taking our GD to nursery for a "taster" session. while they played the teaching assistant spoke to us about the reading schemes they used when LEARNING the children to read. I could not believe my ears, what chance have they of learning anything if this is the standard of spoken english the teacher uses? I am inclined to write to the school with my concerns, should I or should I wait til next week and have a quiet word with her in person?

bagitha Wed 09-Nov-11 13:06:39

I think there is a lot in what carol says, that kids learn despite schools' best efforts! Perhaps my kids learnt their grammar from me — I certainly always corrected them when they said some horror like "would of". My first name begins with an aitch and I hate haitch too! Maybe there are more grammar-ignorant people simply because there are more people. I'd hazard a guess that the proportion of grammar-ignorant people has not changed much over the years. As for teachers not knowing their grammar: shouldn't we be complaining about teacher training colleges in that case rather than schools?

Joan Wed 09-Nov-11 12:45:12

It was this article that got me worried about teaching standards.

www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2058362/UK-education-Fifth-trainee-teachers-sums-spell.html

Yes, I know it is from the dreaded Daily Mail, but they are quoting stats from the Training and Development Agency for Schools, which I presume to be reasonably trustworthy.

I'm no longer in England: my children were educated here in Australia, in the catholic school system, as catholics have traditionally been leading educators here. (I was a catholic back then, but have since moved away from religious belief entirely. I still support their educational system though, and my eldest lad teaches at a local catholic co-ed high school. Religious indoctrination in these schools is a thing of the past)

I kept an eye on what was going on, and the only thing I could fault them on, was saying 'haitch' for 'aitch'. I did mention this to the headmaster during a conversation about something else, and he laughed and said 'haitch' had been brought over here from the nineteenth century by Irish nuns, and all his efforts had failed to correct it!

gracesmum Wed 09-Nov-11 12:39:36

If children learn grammar as part of the Literacy Strategy, all I can say is that it isn't working! One problem is that a whole generation of teachers failed to receive adequate grammar teaching. I am a retired Assistant Head of MFL and have seen some lovely colleagues, inspired teachers, but who did not understand correct English or French grammar. I used to tear my hair out correcting school reports (practice/practise;affect/effect;lose/loose; you're/your etc) How can you teach what you do not understand?
A very bright A-level German student once asked in all seriousness "What exactly is a verb, Mrs. ......"
As for reading stuff on social networks other than GN I can become quite apoplectic (OK, don't read it then!) again, often posted by teachers who are former colleagues.
And just to put everybody's blood pressure up
(wait for it)
I should of/he could of............shock

Carol Wed 09-Nov-11 12:04:12

The saying in my house is that 'children get a good education despite school.' All four of my children had some brilliant and some horrendous teachers at their comprehensive. All went on to university, and when reflecting back on school, they remember the frustration of teachers at the inspections, badly behaved pupils, constant suspensions, disruption because of teacher stress and sickness, burnt-out teachers who seemed to hate their job, and generally hearing that they couldn't undertake certain projects, trips and activities because of shortage of school resources. Some proper investment in our children, teachers and their schools would go a long way, and they would be more likely to show their proficiency at their English grammar when they started seeking employment.

bagitha Wed 09-Nov-11 11:39:35

Yes, * mamie*, it would. The moans never stop, do they? There are twenty years between my oldest and my youngest child so I saw lots of changes in schools. What stayed constant though, at least in my experience, was good teaching of language skills including grammar, good teaching of mathematical skills including arithmetic, good teaching of.... well, pretty much everything in the primary schools they went to. The two older ones went to a common or garden tree-climbing comprehensive wink and got a good grounding there too. They are well-educated young women. The youngest has yet to finish primary school but I have absolutely no complaints about the teaching standards.

As a school governor I saw a lot of the changes from a different angle as well, but that's another story.

Like you, I wish the media and the government would just stop moaning about schools.

Mamie Wed 09-Nov-11 11:20:27

Children in the UK also learn grammar from the beginning of Primary School, Maggie. The National Literacy Strategy has had very clear guidelines about what must be taught in each year group. In my professional life I have observed many excellent lessons in schools and now I am retired I can see my grandchildren in England working through the programmes and spending a lot of time on homework for grammar and spelling.
I can't say that I have seen any evidence of anyone in schools thinking that education should not be hard work and I think it is a bit unfair to blame schools because BBC announcers use the passive tense. I would also be interested to see the evidence that says that young English people would fail the Cambridge exams, although clearly exams for a first language are not the same as those for a second one. I am sure someone will be along shortly to say that employers think that standards of English are very low for school leavers, but to be honest employers have been saying that throughout all the years I have worked in education and probably for a couple of hundred years before that.
Wouldn't it be nice to hear some positive views of our schools and our children for a change?

Joan Wed 09-Nov-11 11:19:40

Sorry - knowing grammar never prevents typos! 10th word of first row should be 'to'.

Joan Wed 09-Nov-11 11:17:30

I think you have to understand grammar in order use your language properly. Of course, everyone can get by without that understanding, just like you can drive a car without understanding what goes on under the bonnet. But when problems arise, you really do need to have some idea about how the whole thing works.

When you consistently get it wrong, when your use of English shows you have no idea how your own language works, then you lose some degree of credibility. You might not realise it, but it could be why you didn't get that job, or why you failed to impress that person etc.

For instance, Greatnan posted:-

^I was appalled when I heard a teacher at my grand-children's prep school 'correcting' their English.

Grandson: He gave it to James and me.
Teacher: No, we say 'He gave it to James and I'.
I believe this is known as 'the knob's pronoun'. I wanted to say to her 'Would you say 'he gave it to I'? but I did not want to embarrass my grandson. Needless to say, the children were soon removed from the school.^

A school lost some pupils here. Did they know why? (I do hope you told them, Greatnan, not that it would make much difference, I suspect)

Making life to easy for our children at school by not expecting high standards is doing them a great disservice. It is unforgivable. Allowing ignorant people to teach or influence our children is appalling.

This is not being pedantic. It is wanting the best education for our children, to give them the best start in life. Why would anyone want to compromise that?

expatmaggie Wed 09-Nov-11 10:55:39

Its all about education and the fear in England at the moment that education could, might be hard work. When I taught German for Stockport (Further education for adults) I was told by the principal not to teach grammar! Just conversation. I had to ignore her of course. A language even conversation, consists of grammatical structures. You don't have to over emphasise but to know what a noun and a verb is, is helpful.
8 yr olds learn grammar in German schools. They learn how sentences are constructed, verbs, nouns, and the difference between an adverb and an adjective.
A language does develop with time and English is now a world language and in some countries unrecognisable. But all these forms of English will have some basic structures which remain stable.
What is so annoying is the misuse of words just for effect, and when you've heard them a thousand times, there are only the gransnetters left to complain.

What most annoys me about the BBC is the misuse of the Passive tense,
They start a news item with
A man is killed in .......... This is the passive tense as the man has not killed himself and when told after the event should be
'A man has been killed ..... '
As foreign students of English, would lose marks for not using the Passive Tense correctly I feel it is a bit unfair. The Cambridge Cerificate of English which is the standard expected from foreign students, is so difficult that most young Brits woud not pass it. However they would get a D,E or F, mark and the poor foreigner would fail. No sympathy there.

Ariadne Wed 09-Nov-11 09:31:28

I once showed a class of very bright 15 year olds how we used to parse, and they loved it, most of them, anyway. I think they liked something in English lessons that was either right or wrong!

Greatnan Tue 08-Nov-11 15:12:48

I would never correct anyone's spelling on a forum, but I have noticed that some words seem to give difficulty to many people - one example is 'loose' for 'lose'.
The other forums I use are specifically for ex-pats in France, so the membership does tend to be more mixed than the erudite ladies on this forum, both as to age and education.
I remember having to parse and analyse sentences. Did it do me any good? Well, it did make me understand how a sentence is constructed and I thoroughly enjoyed it, as I have a very logical mind. I certainly would never have said 'should of' instead of 'should have' because I knew about auxiliary verbs!

Ariadne Tue 08-Nov-11 14:39:30

Yes, but spelling hadn't been standardised by Chaucer and Shakespeare's time. And Chaucer's English was the English of the common people, and had scarcely been written down before.

Language is a dynamic system, always changing and growing. However, we need to speak and write as accurately as possible to be best understood, and transposing "teaching" and "learning" does not help.

A TA is not a trained teacher, as has been pointed out, though heaven only knows where we'd be without them.

Nevertheless, I am pedant enough to wince at poor grammar, mispronunciation (not regional accents!) and, of course, the ubiquitous apostrophe ( but we've been there.)

em Tue 08-Nov-11 14:25:43

Many, many people must have been 'ticked off' for saying, 'Me and my ......... did this or that'. They perhaps think that they have more chance of getting it right if they always use 'I' instead of me. There's also the misconception that it sounds 'nicer' or more polite. The idea has been reinforced by incorrect usage on tv.
I agree about the sing/plural subject and verb problem too. How often do we hear 'There's many answers to that question' ....or similar. I'll head off back to Pedants' Corner - haven't visited for a while!!

gracesmum Tue 08-Nov-11 13:43:20

I wouldn't have held back on the "embarrassing" front. I hear it so often on radio and TV from people who clearly should know better - it's almost like an over-compensation in case they don't sound "proper" enough.
"Between you and I" is another common example along with singular/plural verbs with plural/singuar subjects e.g." This kind of things make me angry" (These kinds of thing make me angry/This kind of thing makes me angry etc etc)
Could this presage The Pedants' Revolt?

Greatnan Tue 08-Nov-11 13:28:46

I was appalled when I heard a teacher at my grand-children's prep school 'correcting' their English.

Grandson: He gave it to James and me.
Teacher: No, we say 'He gave it to James and I'.
I believe this is known as 'the knob's pronoun'. I wanted to say to her 'Would you say 'he gave it to I'? but I did not want to embarrass my grandson. Needless to say, the children were soon removed from the school.

Elegran Mon 11-Jul-11 08:35:55

A function of our age, experience and old-fashioned education.

FlicketyB Sun 10-Jul-11 22:28:32

One of the revelations of Gransnet has been being able to read all the well-written, grammatical, correctly spelt and properly thought out contributions of members. I obviously do not agree with everything I read but contributors have so obviously thought about what they want to say before they wrote it.

On so many sites I have looked at before too many contributions were incoherent and devoid of grammar, spelling and thought.

Annobel Sun 10-Jul-11 16:01:53

Shakespeare? Chaucer? They had so much freedom with the language and were able to mould it to their purposes. What a blessing they lived and wrote before dictionaries froze English into its present forms. Thank you, Dr Johnson.

Elegran Sun 10-Jul-11 11:54:22

Shakespeare was a pedant compared to Chaucer.

Annobel Sun 10-Jul-11 11:24:59

We once had estate agent's particulars of a house that had, apparently, 'defused' lighting which I thought slightly worrying!

absentgrana Sun 10-Jul-11 11:00:15

Have you seen Shakespeare's erratic spelling? He even spelled his own name differently at different times. And the man had the cheek to invent words too.

helshea Sun 10-Jul-11 10:59:29

Why does everyone use the word impossible, when what they really mean is "difficult"?

Baggy Sat 09-Jul-11 20:54:56

It's horrible to read stuff about your house that is badly written but I suspect that until the sloppy language some of them use prevents estate agents from selling houses, then they won't care. They probably use a lot of jargon phrases too.

I think the language at its best is quite safe. There are plenty of really good writers of English in the world. Plenty of bad ones too but I expect there always were.

artygran Sat 09-Jul-11 20:38:59

The point of all this is, surely, that if we do not get the basics of correctly spoken English and good grammar across to children from an early age, bad habits will set in. I am extremely fussy about correct use of the language and I like to think it is reflected in the way both of my now adult children write and speak. Standards in some areas, however, are appalling. We are currently in the process of selling our house and the standards of written English among estate agents, as evidenced in their details, leaves one close to tears. Assuming that someone, somewhere, is supposed to be proof-reading the stuff they put out, then either they haven't got a clue about spelling, punctuation and syntax or they just don't care. If they haven't got a clue, then it is due to the fact that they are leaving school and going into employment not having been taught to use the language properly. I would hate to think they are being taught by people who don't have a clue! Sorry to sound pompous but this is a huge bugbear with me. I feel that our language is going to hell on a handcart!

baggythecrust! Fri 01-Jul-11 21:52:17

I agree, grandmaagain, that it is not snobbery to expect that children should be taught the correct use of English. I didn't say it was. I said it was snobbery not to accept, be tolerant of, enjoy (even!) regional variations of usage which, while defined in certain places as 'non-standard', are not incorrect. Non-standard means non-standard; it doesn't mean incorrect.

A further small point is that in the situation you describe, if I have understood it correctly, the person speaking was (a) not a teacher and (b) not teaching.

I'm actually very fussy about both correct grammar and clear articulation and always corrected my own kids if they spoke incorrectly or in a slovenly manner. I don't call using regional diction (which is what's being talked about in your example) bad grammar.