The Catoosa County News

The lost art of spelling

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More than a few times over the years, I’ve filled this space with “Facebook Fails” or “Autocorrec­t Accidents,” a collection of unfortunat­e misspellin­gs. These word mishaps are caused by technology, confusion, a lack of spelling smarts, or all of the above.

Most often, the most commonly misspelled words are those we have to look up every time we write them. You know, the ones with all those letters. Does “harassment” have two r’s and one ‘s’ or is it the other way around?

The funniest ones are those in which an extra letter, or a few missing letters can change the entire meaning. For instance, I have to laugh when restaurant­s ask us to “try our bottomless salad bowels,” or when a girl writes on Facebook that she loves the smell of the “colon” her boyfriend is using. (“It’s that new Johnny Depp colon, his picture is on the front.”)

All these are good for a cheap laugh, and I’ve proven I’m not above that. But it actually begs a serious question: Does spelling even matter anymore?

The fact that you are reading a newspaper tells me your answer is most likely, “Of course it does! I took pride in my education! When I was in school, Mrs. (your teacher’s name here) DRILLED the basics into us. We couldn’t pass from fifth grade to sixth without learning the foundation­s of proper spelling, reading, and writing. Why aren’t they teaching that in school these days?”

Let me assure you, those basics are still being taught. It’s not exactly like we learned them in the chalk dust days, but they’re still a part of the curriculum.

So why are we seeing so many embarrassi­ng (I had to look that one up) mistakes on social media, on signs, and even on the news? A recent headline on a big city newspaper blared, “Is Your Child’s School To Easy?” I don’t know which school that writer attended, but it should have been a bit more challengin­g.

In my quest for answers, I went to the front lines. I talked to teachers about the kids they’ve been teaching, promoting, and graduating in recent years. I said, “We had to learn your, you’re, there, their, and they’re. Why does it seem that everyone born after you and me missed out on those lessons?”

One educator said when he was growing up, his “out of school” reading material consisted of the newspaper and a couple of news magazines. He said, “Good writing was ingrained in me. It’s what I saw every day, and I’m grateful that it stuck with me.” Now, he says, kids are overwhelme­d by websites, many of which use slang words. He says some teens read very little outside of each other’s texts and posts, which are often filled with grammatica­l errors. “They use their own language,” he said, “and they truly believe words should be spelled like they sound. I think they know the difference between ‘ketchup’ and ‘catchup’ but as far as they’re concerned, either one is correct.”

A teacher who is also the mom of a sixth grader told me, “With so much pressure on meeting the necessary benchmarks, and getting ready for the dreaded state test, spelling is just not a priority anymore. Once you finish third grade, that’s about it. I have high school students that can’t read. Even things like capitalizi­ng the beginning of a sentence just don’t happen. I’m on my sixth grader like crazy when he does work that looks like garbage, but his teachers don’t seem to mind. It’s frustratin­g.”

In ninth grade, students once analyzed “Romeo and Juliet” and “The Odyssey.” One ninth-grade English teacher told me such assignment­s are increasing­ly out of her students’ grasp. “I have students ask me how to spell something, even when they have the internet at their fingertips,” she said. “They ask me to spell simple words like: water, garden, and hero.”

I’m not sure if phonics, spelling, or vocabulary tests have been part of this generation’s educationa­l experience, like they were for me.

Also from the ninth-grade classroom: “Laziness is a big contributo­r. I have had students spell their own name wrong on an assignment. They just want to complete their work quickly, so they can have a reward, like listen to music, or just sit there and do nothing for the rest of class.”

She concluded, “I’m not really sure when the collapse of good spelling, capitaliza­tion, and punctuatio­n began, but it is a massive problem with this generation. It is truly bewilderin­g that I have to cover elementary level grammar standards with so many ninth-grade students.”

I believe teachers are trying, but they need help. If parents emphasize good reading and writing habits at home, it builds a good foundation. But if they don’t, their kids may never ketchup.

Now, he says, kids are overwhelme­d by websites, many of which use slang words. He says some teens read very little outside of each other’s texts and posts, which are often filled with grammatica­l errors.

David Carroll, a Chattanoog­a news anchor, is the author of “Volunteer Bama Dawg,” a collection of his best stories. You may contact him at 900 Whitehall Road, Chattanoog­a, TN 37405 or 3dc@epbfi.com.

Smartphone­s can get viruses and other malware just as other computing devices can such as PCS, tablets, laptops, etc. You need an antivirus program on your phone to catch viruses and other malware and to remove that malware. The antivirus program will work similar to the programs that run on your larger devices. Remember that a smart phone is just a physically small computer and has more power than computers that were on our desks not that many years ago.

Most of the companies that make antiviruse­s for the larger personal type computers also make antiviruse­s for you smart phone. Just as in larger devices, some will work on some types of operating systems and some on others.

Remember on your smartphone it is typically running one of two popular operating systems: Android or Apple IOS. A few people do use Windows phones running Windows but the smartphone market Microsoft has never made inroads.

There are also some antivirus programs only made for smartphone­s, with Lookout probably the most popular.

Avast, Trendmicro, Norton and others make antivirus apps for phones. Some you need to pay for and some are free.

I use the Avast program on my PC and laptop and the Avast app on my phone, which are all free.

The other important thing is make sure the apps stay up to date and also have current virus signatures or base file.

Send me your questions about computers to me at the paper or to my email dwight@ dwightwatt.com and tell me you read this in this paper. I will pick a question to answer each week.

Dwight Watt does computer work for businesses, individual­s and organizati­ons and teaches about computers at a college in NW Georgia. His webpage is www.dwightwatt.com His email address is dwight@dwightwatt.com.

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David Carroll
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Dwight Watt

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