A recent article entitled, “SOL SCORE STAGNATION” highlighted the fact that
reading and
writing scores are down. State officials point out that like math scores, which
were once also down but are now on the rise, reading and writing scores will
also rise once students become more comfortable with the tests. Interesting.
They do not say that reading and writing will become better—only that scores
will get better.
I garnered
this information from my Thursday edition of the Virginian-Pilot but the vast majority of people getting this news will pull the story off the Internet. There, they will be free to
go immediately to the comment section and read what anonymous people everywhere
were saying about the story; and by the fifth or sixth comment also discover
what these anonymous people were saying about everything and anything else
under the sun while breaking every imaginable grammar rule in the book—assuming
there still are grammar books.
They can
then Tweet and text their friends about the article. The good news is no one
will be grading those.
Reading and
writing scores are down because reading and writing serve no purpose in the
modern world—at least not reading and writing the way it used to be. Today,
words are out, punctuation is out, complete sentences are out, and coherent
ideas are out.
LOL, !!!!!, &
:'( (for crying out loud) are in.
For the past
year, I have been transcribing letters between my father, when he was a POW in
Germany and my mother, a WAVE serving in Pensacola, Florida. Their engagement, like those of most of their friends from that era, was carried on through the mail. These letters help
to point out the stark differences between then and now. They also say
something about reading and writing.
Most
importantly, I can hold these letters, which are over 70 years old in my hand
just as my parents did when they sent and received them. Most of the millions
of Tweets and comments that have been posted online over just the short time I
have been writing this have already been forgotten and been moved down the page—never
to be seen again, replaced by even less important and equally forgettable stuff.
My father
was captured in Sicily on July 22, 1943. She continued writing even though her
letters were being returned, “addressee missing in action.” He continued to write not knowing if his
letters were even being received. Finally, on February 4, 1944 he receive his first
letter from home. He responded immediately, “Finally received a letter from
home. You can imagine what it meant to me.”
Waiting for
something makes it more important. Knowing that someone else is waiting for
your response makes what you say and how you say it even more important.
Today, if
something is posted on Facebook and doesn’t receive a “Like” within a reasonable
amount of time—usually a few hours—the poster wants to know what happened. With
so many words going out to so many people so many times on so many subject, the
obvious question becomes, “How can any of it be important?”
The answer
is, it isn’t.
And neither
are the writing skills that go into texting and Tweeting. Once you become used
to reading misspelled words and miss-punctuated sentences, not to mention
sentences that don’t even make sense to begin with, it’s not long before
reading skills also go out the window.
In today’s
world, speed is of the essence. That and ease—easy to write, easy to read. If
it isn’t easy and it isn’t fast, then it isn’t getting done. In today’s world
of low reading and writing scores, nobody is going to wait almost a year for a
response. Who has that kind of time?
Lest a young
reader think I’m just another disgruntled old dinosaur out of touch with the
always changing times, I’d point out that when I was their age we had
abbreviated, coded messages, too.
Whether as
students away at college or soldiers in Vietnam, our correspondence often
contained the cryptic message S.W.A.K. (sealed with a kiss) on the flap of the envelope. The only
difference between then and now is that we also had a written letter inside that
could be held in our hands and read. Some of us still have those letters.
Hello PaPa...
ReplyDeleteMy daddy feels the same about photos as you do about your letters and writing. He likes to hold a photo in his hands. My daddy says there is nothing like shooting a roll of Kodak film, developing and printing it. Those were the days.
Can you send me another one of those letters PaPa...
RoRo