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As I spoke of previously, I had a phenomenal group of teachers to learn from when at the MTA in Sioux Falls. One of which was Reva Potter of Belle Fourche Middle School. Reva teaches Middle School English and has explored Grammar Checker. You know Grammar Checker, even if you think you don’t. The little squiggly lines below your words, phrases, or even entire paragraphs because you did something wrong– as defined by the higher authority. Well, it was great to listen to Reva talk about Grammar Checker (and numerous other teaching strategies- THANK YOU!).

I have had my own personal beef with Grammar Checker and semicolons. Cory over at Madville Times posted about suitable semicolon usage about a year ago, and it pushed me to write a special unit simply on colon and semicolon usage for my Senior English class. I often find it hard to believe that a senior term paper that ranges in length from 10- 12 pages should contain 15 semicolons. There are more effective ways of writing that make it less haughty, but that is just my rant. It seems as though, when in doubt about sentence structure, Grammar Checker just inserts a semicolon. And, as most of my students cannot wait to get through the term paper, they right click and go to the top ‘fix’ that Grammar Checker recommends.

While working with the National Writing Project, Reva worked with Education Professor Dorothy Fuller to write about the newest English teacher in every classroom. Potter and Fuller Article pdf

One of the main points that Reva stressed was that our most commonly used Grammar Checker is actually about 40 percent correct. FORTY PERCENT! That is failing on any grading scale that I have ever used or have been subjected to. Students automatically fall back to the fact that the computer is always correct, and that is not always true, as stated by Reva. I remember after the first ‘Character Analysis Essay’ that I assigned during my first year of teaching. A highly talented Senior was upset that I had deducted points from her scoring rubric for marking a comma usage as incorrect. She brought her computer up to me, showed me the paper, and explained that, “Well, the computer does not say that it is incorrect– how could you mark it wrong?” I directed her to a grammar handbook, but she still wasn’t buying it. It was a difficult situation for me to work through and I really did not know what I was going to do. I grew up with computers and trusted computers too. I do not actually remember what we did to resolve the conflict (I think we split the difference on the rubric), but it was a gut-wrenching, stomach jump into my throat moment that I will not soon forget. Everything that I knew what being counted wrong– on the first paper assignment! (By the way, this senior is going to school to be an English teacher now, and I know she will be fantastic!)

The theoretical lightbulb gleamed at full wattage as I heard Reva talk about Grammar Checker– again, thank you Reva! The concept of looking at Grammar Checker as a tool and not the end-all-be-all of grammar education is great approach. I think that this year I will do as Reva did in her research project and look at essays in both grammar checked and non-checked form. We will also partner up and then evaluate the differences.

So next time you are conflicted with Grammar Checker, look at it again from this new view…

Working in the world of education, we take for granted that everybody knows that world is full of people with different learning styles and abilities. While I was at the Master Teacher Academy in Sioux Falls, Rebecca Rittenour of Hitchcock-Tulare High School showed me a great website that will help me to target more learning styles and abilities.

Librivox is an organization that was formed in August 2005 and since has grown to seven highly ambitious individuals who work to create mp3 recordings of works that are in the public domain. This is a great idea! As you already know, I have sent you to check out Google’s great library of books that are in the public domain, and Librivox takes it one step further to make an excellent resource for educators.

Before I even thought of the implications in my classroom, I thought about my 11-year-old neighbor. He is considered legally blind, because he was born prematurely and the pressures in his corneas were not correct. I really do not know a lot about this condition, but I do know that when his little sister was born this past December they were very concerned and monitored these pressures closely. And, by the way, she is doing beautifully now and her sight is not impaired. I just thought of the great things that he could listen to. Endearingly known around the neighborhood as the ‘question boy’, he is always wanting to learn. When I told his Mom about the website, she was elated. She has already downloaded some Bible stories for him to listen to.

In the classroom, I plan to link these recordings from my website so that my students can have the option to ‘listen along’ as they read. Listening aloud may be the way to improve reading comprehension for some students. With many novels, we just do not have the time to read the entirety of the novel in class. The students could also look at the catalog that they have and consider contributing to it, by reading short stories, poetry, or novels from the public domain to add to the library.

The recordings are also available in numerous languages which may benefit foreign language teachers too.

As we are also able to download these recordings to my iPod, I think that I will download some of the classics to my iPod to listen to. As I have also told you before, I will be able to listen to them on my commute to work by hooking it up to my Saturn Vue.

I am very exited about the possibilities that Librivox.org can offer my classroom and can’t wait to try it! I will let you know how it works.

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