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  1. #46
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    Jun 2006
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    Newport, RI
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    Quote Originally Posted by Crankin View Post
    We are a dying breed.
    I think we are an evolving breed, and IMing is having a huge impact on both language and culture. My friend, who just taught a college level class, told me kids think email is for old people. It seems a simplification of our language is already occuring, and the complexities of spelling will "prolly" be eliminated by a phonetic and abbreviated new English. IMHO.

    Remember when we learned to write cursive. Do kids learn that anymore?

  2. #47
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    California
    Posts
    777
    Just read this and thought it appropriate for this thread. Enjoy!

    Typo on Diplomas Embarrasses Ohio Principal

    A Cleveland-area principal says he's embarrassed his students got proof of their "educaiton" on their high school diplomas.

    Westlake High School officials misspelled "education" on the diplomas distributed last weekend. It's been the subject of mockery on local radio.

    Principal Timothy Freeman says he sent back the diplomas once to correct another error. When the diplomas came back, no one bothered to check things they thought were right the first time.

    The publisher has reprinted the diplomas a second time and sent them to the 330 graduates.

  3. #48
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Kelowna, BC, Canada
    Posts
    2,737
    Quote Originally Posted by michelem View Post
    Just read this and thought it appropriate for this thread. Enjoy!

    Typo on Diplomas Embarrasses Ohio Principal

    A Cleveland-area principal says he's embarrassed his students got proof of their "educaiton" on their high school diplomas.

    Westlake High School officials misspelled "education" on the diplomas distributed last weekend. It's been the subject of mockery on local radio.

    Principal Timothy Freeman says he sent back the diplomas once to correct another error. When the diplomas came back, no one bothered to check things they thought were right the first time.

    The publisher has reprinted the diplomas a second time and sent them to the 330 graduates.

    LOL!!!

    Our principal once wrote an blurb in the school news letter about lice that said something along the lines of "students would be checked by the pubic health nurse." And this was a pretty straight-laced principal...
    It is never too late to be what you might have been. ~ George Elliot


    My podcast about being a rookie triathlete:Kelownagurl Tris Podcast

  4. #49
    Join Date
    Oct 2002
    Location
    San Francisco Bay Area
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    9,324
    Quote Originally Posted by redrhodie View Post

    Remember when we learned to write cursive. Do kids learn that anymore?
    Yes.


    V.
    Discipline is remembering what you want.


    TandemHearts.com

  5. #50
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Kelowna, BC, Canada
    Posts
    2,737
    Quote Originally Posted by Veronica View Post
    Yes.


    V.
    I teach it in grade 3.
    It is never too late to be what you might have been. ~ George Elliot


    My podcast about being a rookie triathlete:Kelownagurl Tris Podcast

  6. #51
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Uncanny Valley
    Posts
    14,498
    Well, English was written for some 800 years before spelling was standardized, so it may be that standardized spelling is (was?) just a passing fad. Perhaps something intended all along to stratify society, or provide evidence of a writer's social class to a reader who might not be acquainted with him (since in those days it would've been almost exclusively "him").

    I wonder about the text messaging though. Most of us are probably part of that "fastest-growing demographic" and most of us have probably been taught by our younger relatives how to use the predictive spelling feature. While kids four or five years ago might've used abbreviations and numbers to substitute for word sounds, nowadays it's quicker most of the time to key in the actual words.

    I read a science fiction story a couple of years back - I can't even remember the plot, but there'd been some kind of disaster so the computers weren't accessible, and the thing about it was that everyone in the community knew how to read, but no one knew how to write. Interesting thought. I very, very rarely write any more, as in marking characters on a fiber-based storage medium. The closest I come to it is entering Graffiti! characters on my Palm.
    Last edited by OakLeaf; 06-06-2008 at 05:17 PM.
    Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler

  7. #52
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    Sunny Florida
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    108
    Quote Originally Posted by redrhodie View Post
    I think we are an evolving breed, and IMing is having a huge impact on both language and culture. My friend, who just taught a college level class, told me kids think email is for old people. It seems a simplification of our language is already occuring, and the complexities of spelling will "prolly" be eliminated by a phonetic and abbreviated new English. IMHO.

    Remember when we learned to write cursive. Do kids learn that anymore?
    Agreed. The English language is constantly evolving. What we speak today would horrify past "sticklers." Think of "goodbye," which originated from "God be with you." That doesn't seem to be so different from prolly.

    But I do hate the word "prolly"; maybe because it makes think of Proles, which makes me thing of 1984, which always makes me a little sick.
    My first charity ride! The MS150 Cycle to the Shore

  8. #53
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
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    I'm the only one allowed to whine
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    10,557
    I remember something from one of my Shakespeare classes about how many different ways Shakespeare spelled his own name.

    There was a bit of discussion about how some folks thought this was proof that there were several people writing under the nom de plume "Shakespeare", but the upshot was that at that time creative spelling was the norm, even for one's own name.
    "If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson

 

 

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