The question of whether or not to
teach grammar constitutes a hot issue among English teachers in my district. We
must cover all of the College and Career Ready Standards that apply to our
students, and none of these standards explicitly mention any specific
grammar rules; many have taken the omission as a release from this
responsibility. This release feels welcomed, as students almost entirely dread
grammar lessons and in fact many English teachers do not feel confident in
their abilities to teach grammar. Those who do teach grammar lessons express
exasperation for their colleagues, attributing their students’ writing
deficiencies to those teachers who failed to aptly prepare them with diligent
and regular grammar drills. Who is right? Should English teachers ignore
grammar in their classrooms, or should they promote rote memorization of terms,
definitions, and rules?
This sounds highly impractical, doesn't it? Messy? Impossible to plan for? Many teachers prefer to run a tight ship, or at the very least, they prefer to know what they will be teaching before class begins. The prospect of identifying and teaching to errors as they arise may sound intimidating. Well, tough cookies. Think about what we are asking students to do, and you will understand intimidating. We ask students to write essays, when they have had relatively few experiences doing so. If this weren’t enough to turn students off, we parade grammar rules around them, shouting “Don’t do this! Don’t do that!” while rarely building a bridge between the infinite list of no-no’s and the actual sentences that they struggle to compose until after the grade has been assigned. Where is the motivation or the means to improve in this model?
Rather than simply pointing out errors in lieu of actual instruction, Mina
P. Shaughnessy suggests that the teachers “try to explain why a certain word
won’t work in a particular setting—to ponder over the student’s choice,
demonstrating its semantic and syntactic limits or contrasting it with other
words that do not create the same constraints” (76). This mode requires an
active writing workshop, where students and teachers can engage in a
free-flowing verbal dialog about a student’s past choices and about their
options moving forward in the drafting process. This workshop model proves
effective as it hyper-focuses grammar in the context of the student’s own
writing, thereby characterizing it as a helpful tool for the student rather
than as an arbitrary exercise.
I am determined to take off my boots and get in the mud with grammar
instruction. I know that operating the
workshop of Shaughnessy’s vision will prove laborious and may sometimes feel too
time consuming, but consider this: “Teaching grammar in isolation from writing—that
is, teaching the grammar book instead of helping writers write—has been found
again and again to have little if any positive effect on most students’ writing”
(Weaver and Bush 14). If this is true, then the real waste of time is either
removing grammar instruction altogether or presenting it to students in
vacuum-packed parcels that seem completely separate from the issues they
confront in their own writing.
What I must constantly bear in mind is that writing and grammar are
inextricably bound, and therefore both must be taught, and must be taught
simultaneously. What teachers often
mistake as a student who utterly lacks interest in improving their writing and their
grasp on grammar is actually a student who has not been shown the crucial
connection between the two. Once the teacher establishes this marriage, they
can most effectively engender student growth.
Works Cited
Shaughnessy,
Mina P. Errors and Expectations. New
York: Oxford UP, 1977. (Excerpts)
Weaver,
Constance, and Jonathan Bush. Grammar to
Enrich and Enhance Writing. Portsmouth: Heinemann, 2008.
You just put into words exactly how I've felt about grammar both as a student and as a pre-service teacher! I love that you pointed out the grammar is not explicitly listed as one of the College and Career Ready Standards. That does give teachers an easy way out; if it's not important to the almighty deciders of students' standards, why should it be important to me as a measly teacher?
ReplyDeleteI think it is really beneficial for us to be taking the Theory in Practice and Composition class in conjunction with our Methods class because so many of the ideas and goals for pre-service teachers are the same. After about 3 months of these courses, it is pretty obvious that both are trying to instill the importance of teaching grammar into pre-service teachers.
It is pretty obvious to all of us taking those courses that grammar instruction is crucial to improving student writing. However, how will we convince our teaching teams or the rest of whatever school we're hired at of its importance? I think you're exactly right when you say many teachers do not teach grammar because they don't even have confidence enough in themselves to teach their students. Maybe teachers should use this to their advantage instead of being afraid of it. We're also encouraged as pre-service teachers to show students that we are learning with them. Students might benefit from seeing that grammar is even a struggle for teachers and give them more confidence to make errors and learn from their mistakes.
You're right when you say that the lack of interest for improving student writing may be due to the fact that they've never been told the importance of grammar as a way to improve writing. Your students and the students of any teacher that has the mindset you do about grammar instruction will greatly benefit from having you as a teacher!
Love this post, Mary, as well as the response it elicited from Sarah. Marvelously informed dialogue! And I can see your post evolving into a full-fledged article that you submit to Kansas English or another journal in the field. Go for it.
ReplyDeleteOne quick note: Although the KCCRS don't mention specific "rules" per se, they do mention competencies that students should demonstrate. For example, at the 8th grade level ...
L.8.1b -- Form and use verbs in the active and passive voice.
L.8.1c -- Form and use verbs in the indicative, imperative, interrogative, conditional, and subjunctive mood.
Etc.
Review your standards at your grade level and see if you can locate specific language, usage, conventions competencies that teachers can focus on.
Thanks for this post!