I recall a post by a colleague of mine who had a complaint
about well-educated/employed adults using da (the), der (there) and dat (that)
in their Facebook posts and comments. Although I refrained from responding to
the post she received quite a bit of slack for voicing her concern. She was
informed that in the world/age of social media this form of communication was
acceptable. As the comments trickled in, the "offended" readers basically told her to get off her high horse.
Looking back on it now I can understand her concern and I think many of these
adults missed her point. She felt that as grown adults who are well-educated
and working in higher positions should reflect this in their writing no matter
what social media they are writing on or under?
However, as a teacher at that time, I recognized her concern. Many of the students in our school were/are struggling to switch from "informal language of digital writing to the formal language of academia" (Turner, 2012, p.46). The people who took offense were not familiar with the ongoing
struggles of trying to teach students the difference between the two forms of
writing, and that their frequent errors were due to their inability to
consciously switch to the appropriate language. However, if she had read this
article – as I know her very well, she would have taken this idea and found a
way to turn her students’ mastery of digitalk into a skill that could be used
to help them with standard academic writing.
Any opinions or thoughts on this matter?
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