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Pedants' corner

Is it me???

(73 Posts)
soselfopininated Mon 17-Jul-17 18:48:35

I have just downloaded a lovely summary of the first school year of my grandson along with pictures. However, AIBU at being absolutely horrified at the spelling mistakes made by the teachers? For example, one teacher had written next to a picture of my grandson completing a jigsaw, 'he is looking for all the peaces of the jigsaw' and then followed this with 'the peaces have all been joined'. Another picture was accompanied by 'we have a cupboard full of stationary'. Really? These are people who are supposed to have degrees and be able to teach young minds. It really upsets me, should I be this worried?

lovebeigecardigans1955 Tue 18-Jul-17 16:28:11

Oh dear. I used to clean in a school and often noticed these silly mistakes. I know I'm pedantic and I anonymously used their Tippex to wipe out unneeded apostrophes.
In one of the buildings there was the agenda of a meeting hanging up on a notice board which mentioned the need for a 'canape' above the door instead of 'canopy' and I was surprised that in a department of at least ten people not one of them realised this mistake.
What does a parent do? It makes the teacher look silly if a mistake is pointed out - after all, they are supposed to know, aren't they?

Baggs Tue 18-Jul-17 16:11:51

Kids who read a lot also tend to have a wider vocabulary than those who don't read much. It shows in their creative writing.

BBbevan Tue 18-Jul-17 16:08:37

If people read a lot their spelling is often good. Constantly seeing the written word and punctuation must help.

Elrel Tue 18-Jul-17 16:07:43

Another mistake, I'll go and write out 50 times :
'I must not put 'I'd' when I mean 'is'!

As I say to the pupil who tells me they've finished: 'Check, check and check again!'

HootyMcOwlface Tue 18-Jul-17 16:05:40

I work in a school office and the Head and I have to go through end of year reports and letters etc before they are sent out. The children also have an online learning journal, which sounds very like what you are describing OP, and the Head has to have all the entries approved by her before they go live. The spelling and grammar mistakes are shocking. The teachers are not allowed to post on the school website or Facebook page as the Head and I would probably have an apoplectic fit or a nervous breakdown! How did these teachers manage to get through a degree course is what I say!

Elrel Tue 18-Jul-17 16:02:49

MDT: You've outed the school and the teacher.
This 'is' I'd for you!

SueD: I think etc., as an abbreviation, deserves the full stop.

Soself: In your second paragraph I think the second sentence would be happier with a question mark.

Nit picking? Yes, but only because we're on a nit picking thread. We all make mistakes and the content of any communication is more important than the style.

Baggs Tue 18-Jul-17 16:00:57

People who can't spell can still be inspiring teachers. Spelling isn't the only important thing in a child's education. Compared with learning an attitude of willingness to learn, and how to do it, I'd put spelling quite low on my list of piorities, and I'm fussy about spelling.

Hm999 Tue 18-Jul-17 15:59:08

Private school teachers often have no teaching qualifications.

Ana Tue 18-Jul-17 15:58:53

department

Ana Tue 18-Jul-17 15:58:20

I'd have thought the headteacher, head of year or head of depatment would have enough to do without having to check the spelling of reports!

Cosafina Tue 18-Jul-17 15:47:06

My DGS goes to a private school and the teachers there make terrible spelling/punctuation/grammar errors.
So you can't even get good teachers when you're paying for it!

Nelliemaggs Tue 18-Jul-17 15:19:10

My job took me into classrooms throughout my borough and I had many a quiet word with young teachers when words were misspelt on the whiteboard. I found maths could also be a problem. I sat in on one class where the children were invited to divide 25 by 4. The teacher seemed momentarily stunned when a child told her that 4 into 25 won't go. 6 x 4 is 24. She recovered herself and said the answer is 6 with 1 remaining and you write it like this: '6.1', saying it out loud, 'Six point one'. When the children went out to play I gave her a quick lesson on the use of the decimal point.

On the whole I found teachers grateful to have their spelling errors pointed out to them.

missdeke Tue 18-Jul-17 15:17:12

I agree with most of you about the teachers, my daughter has a problem with my grandchildren's teacher's spelling, apparently the teacher is dyslexic. confused Predictive text can be amusing though, my daughter and I used to text each other using only predictive text then we would try and work out what it actually meant!

Baggs Tue 18-Jul-17 15:16:39

I tend to think about what could have caused spelling mistskes if it's one like aroma spelled aromer. If one had only ever heard the word aroma spoken, never seen it written, didn't know its derivation from Greek, it would be easy to misspell it. If one was like my best friend at school and capable of spelling the same word two different ways, both wrong, and never a clue that they were, it'd be easy too, even if one's English teacher always corrected spelling mistakes and usually added a way to remember the correct one. My friend still got ordinary everyday spellings wrong.

I think nowadays it'd be recognised that she was probably dyslexic.

She got a good degree in English Lit though.

I think headteacher, head of year or head of depatmental checking of reports before they go out is a good idea.

suzied Tue 18-Jul-17 15:00:57

Could it have been a teaching assistant who wrote the captions on the pictures? The teacher should have checked them even so.

willa45 Tue 18-Jul-17 14:59:48

We all make mistakes now and then, to varying degrees. Teachers however, must be held to a higher standard!

Farmers plant only their very best seeds year after year. It's done to avoid crop degradation and to improve the quality of subsequent harvests. So, what does this have to do with education?

Teachers are not unlike those select 'seeds' except they have a greater impact. They educate the next generation of learners and from there comes the next generation of teachers!

That is why it behooves all of us to start raising the bar and demand more from our teachers. If not, education will continue to spiral downward along a path of inevitable degradation.

SueDoku Tue 18-Jul-17 14:58:48

MTDancer shock How can someone (especially a teacher) use 'your' and 'You're' to imply exactly the same idea in consecutive sentences...??? confused
My DS is a teacher, and not only does he have dyslexia, but he was educated in the 'creativity is the important thing' era. He freely admits that his spelling, punctuation etc is not wonderful, due to this unfortunate combination - but he uses technology to weed out spelling mistakes, and always gets handouts and reports proofread, to avoid exactly this type of error.

mcem Tue 18-Jul-17 14:56:13

I had a student who'd graduated in Art from an English university and was on placement with me while undertaking the PGCE. She 'corrected' some of my pupils' work by changing shining and dining to shinning and dinning.
She also admitted she'd no idea about apostrophes and couldn't tell a verb from an adjective.
I helped while she was with me but back at university she had to go into some 'remedial' classes.

Diddy1 Tue 18-Jul-17 14:46:50

You dont suppose she just hit the wrong keys on the computer, and didnt proof read after?

gagsy Tue 18-Jul-17 13:45:09

There's always a dictionary. No excuse

MTDancer Tue 18-Jul-17 13:12:13

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

soselfopininated Tue 18-Jul-17 13:05:12

@durhamjen Whilst I am very open to discussion and don't mind admitting if I'm wrong, I am also aware I come across as 'forceful' in my opinion.... it's something I get from my mother!

With regards to spelling mistakes, everyone makes mistakes on occasion, I get that and on somewhere like Gransnet, really, who cares. But when teachers can't spell simple words like 'piece' or do not know the difference between stationary and stationery, then it truly worries me. It's great they are mentoring and inspiring young minds but surely they should also have even a basic education before they begin to teach others.

Dauntless41 Tue 18-Jul-17 12:45:49

William Shakespeare had four different spellings of his name. OK, so the teachers can't spell. Tut Tut. I bet they can do a lot of other things, though, like mentoring and inspiring young minds.

minxie Tue 18-Jul-17 12:43:57

I popped into Shelly's cafe the other day. Call the apostrophe police

quizqueen Tue 18-Jul-17 12:16:36

I'm very 'hot' on correct spelling and grammar and proofread comments I write so it's very annoying when I see I have still made an error after I've pressed 'send'! Other forums have the capacity to edit comments' I don't see why this site can't do that and I'm sure teachers writing reports DO have that capability to make corrections with the format they use.

My son in law emails the school if he encounters a bad spelling mistake or incorrect punctuation in my granddaughter's reports and letters. The teachers need to be told or they will continue to repeat the mistakes all their professional life if it's not pointed out.