Their evidence: the rising failure rate of students who cannot
“Little or no grammar teaching, cellphone texting, social networking
sites like Facebook and Twitter, all are being blamed for an
increasingly unacceptable number of post-secondary students who can't
write properly,” the Canadian Press reports today (via the Waterlook Record).
]
“Thirty
percent of students who are admitted are not able to pass at a minimum
level,” Ann Barrett, managing director of the English language
proficiency exam at UW, tells the Canadian Press. “We would certainly like it to be a lot lower.”
The failure rate has risen five percent in the past few years, according to the university, which questions whether public high schools are properly preparing the college-bound.
Over at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia, administrators are seeing emoticons, happy faces, sad faces and “cuz” turning up in written work.
After comments from experts blaming social networking for poor writing skills among college students, a University of Toronto writing-support coordinator countered that Spellcheck has reduced spelling errors on today's written submissions.
British researchers at the University of Coventry had expressed surprise over the counter-intuitive link between texting and
literacy. They discovered text language uses word play and requires an
awareness of how sounds relate to written English, helping pupils who regularly text develop skills in the more formal use of English.
OC Weekly Editor-in-Chief Matt Coker has been engaging, enraging and entertaining readers of newspapers, magazines and websites for decades. He spent the first 13 years of his career in journalism at daily newspapers before “graduating” to OC Weekly in 1995 as the alternative newsweekly’s first calendar editor.