Oregon To Let Students Use Spell Check on State Exams 235
Starting in 2011, the Oregon Department of Education will let students spell check their work before submitting state exams. From the article: "The move is supposed to help the assessments focus less on typos and more on their writing skills. 'We are not letting a student's keyboarding skills get in the way of being able to judge their writing ability,' said state Superintendent Susan Castillo. 'As we're using technology to improve what we're doing with assessments as a nation, we believe that spell check will be one of those tools.'"
Get off my lawn... (Score:2)
I can see it already...
"But the tool is there, so why should people have to learn proper spelling? Why should people have to learn to do math by hand if they have computers available?"
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I can haz cheezburger when exam is ovr?
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Your knowledge of graphing calculators is somewhat dated. My $6 solar-powered Casio does numerical integration. My buddy's $150 TI does it symbolically, and quite well. If your in, say, magnetic fields, and your instructor relies heavily on poorly-thought out problems, that symbolic integration is extremely useful if you don't happen to have a complete set of integration tables memorized. (I typically just settled for *a miracle happens* followed by a numerical solution). His even does a lot of basic diff e
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Perhaps I'm old fashioned, but I would allow my students to use numerical algorithms that are as sophisticated as they want -- provided that they wrote all the code themselves and require nothing more than the functions in math.h to compile.
Hell, it might not even be a good idea to let them use that -- make them write sin, cos, etc., from scratch. That way we might actually get students to understand what a Taylor series is good for.
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Re:Get off my lawn... (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.math.umn.edu/~rusin018/1271_Fall_2006/extra_1.pdf [umn.edu]
"...Nine times seven, thought Shuman with deep satisfaction, is sixty-three, and I don't need
a computer to tell me so. The computer is in my own head.
And it was amazing the feeling of power that gave him. "
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http://www.math.umn.edu/~rusin018/1271_Fall_2006/extra_1.pdf [umn.edu]
"...Nine times seven, thought Joe Sixpack with deep satisfaction, is sixty-three, and I don't need
a brain to tell me so. The brain is in my own hand.
And it was amazing the feeling of power that gave him. "
FTFY!
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On the other hand, a missile with a man or two within, controlling flight by graphitics, would be lighter, more mobile, more intelligent. It would give us a lead that might well mean the margin of victory. Besides which, gentlemen, the exigencies of war compel us to remember one thing. A man is much more dispensable than a computer. Manned missiles could be launched in numbers and under circumstances that no good general would care to undertake as far as computer-directed missiles are concerned
which gets me thinking. How much longer do we have to wait until we can wear spell-check goggles that automatically highlight wrong spellings in what we look at, or suggest correct spelling in what we type or handwrite, the way the google search box does? At what point will going in without a spellchecker be as silly as trying to drive without your glasses on?
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Having said that, saying the exam doesn't at least in part test keyboarding skills, or that using spell checker somehow remove
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It also tended to make the writer think more before expressing himself
Next up
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Of course, I remember when I finished high school and the exam meant solely to see how well we spelled had been changed to give you twenty minutes with a dictionary after the test. I placed the dictionary at the corner of my table, leaned back and stared down the teacher for twenty minutes. And got an A. Good times.
Easy Solution (Score:2)
There's something to be said for learning proper spelling and grammar, but I'll be the first to admit that I'm not a terribly great speller and that without Firefox's built-in spell-check, I'd probably end up with significantly more errors. I'd like to think of it as more of a useful tool than a
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Paying attention to what an interactive spell checker is doing may help some learn. It helps if people are that motivated. Some just don't care.
Sometimes the spell checkers just can't figure out what people are attempting to write, but Google can usually guess what is meant.
Perhaps some of that Google code could be adapted to make a good desktop app or browser plugin spell guesser checker helper thing.
It's sad that some employers have to require applications to be done on the spot just to show that applica
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Paying attention to what an interactive spell checker is doing may help some learn.
Sure. Do that on your assignments and when you're writing your emails. On the test you don't learn much, it's time to apply your knowledge.
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I think that is worth considering spelling is not at all like math or even language composition in terms of correctness and there is doubt of the need for a canonical spelling of each word.
Firstly there are a number of studies that show when reading people really only consider the first and last letters of longer words, all the middle is then fluff that is never needed or filled in from context.
Second, having a correct spelling at all is a pretty new concept in terms of English language history. The first
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Mostly the point is old people can't imagine a world where the tools they consider essential are obsolete. But instead of dealing with that fact they throw up some strawman about how we can't lose this vital skill. The appropriate response is typically to ask if they had to learn to ride a horse before driving a car back in the 1900s.
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change isn't hard. Start with the sale price, add pennies to get to a 5. then nickels/dimes to quarters, and finally to whole dollars, 5s, 10s, 20s, etc.I can very quickly tell who can do change by hand by the direction in which they pick up up the change.
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I Think.. (Score:4, Funny)
Eye think eye sea what their doing hear. :-)
Or just ignore spelling errors (Score:3, Insightful)
Cute. Per usual it depends on the goal.
My AP English teacher ignored errors (writeo's he called them), and if I recall correctly the AP Exam did too. He expected spelling to be correct for our homework, but not for in-class exams where a 45 minute limit precluded looking-up words in a dictionary. Content & the thesis mattered more than perfection.
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Content & the thesis mattered more than perfection.
I don't know about you, but when I'm reading something and a word is misspelled, particularly if it's misspelled as a completely different word or has all the same letters as a completely different word, or something like a comma is out of place, I become almost completely derailed by the sentence.
:P
Spell check doesn't fix bad writing though
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Spell check doesn't fix bad writing though :P
No doubt.. I think they're looking at spellcheck as just another extension of calculators on math tests. The argument was that the rote computation didn't relate to understanding of mathematics concepts so calculators were benign.
In my day we had penmanship exams... :D And I imagine that at some point they'll allow full word processors to allow the penmanship-challenged to submit work without fear of their papers being illegible.
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In my day we had penmanship exams... :D
Hahaha! I went to a Catholic school for K-6, and they graded me on penmanship. I routinely got a C :D
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Content & the thesis mattered more than perfection.
I don't know about you, but when I'm reading something and a word is misspelled, particularly if it's misspelled as a completely different word or has all the same letters as a completely different word, or something like a comma is out of place, I become almost completely derailed by the sentence. Spell check doesn't fix bad writing though :P
Maybe it's just me, but every time I see the word "loose" instead of "lose," I have trouble even continuing to read without the author's writing immediately losing merit with me. I mean, people have always screwed up your/you're and there/their/they're, but with lose/loose you can't even enjoy the excuse of just mixing up homophones.
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with lose/loose you can't even enjoy the excuse of just mixing up homophones.
It's not just you, but it likely depends on how you were taught English. The curriculum I was given for early English was Phonics. As a result, even though I usually spell things correctly, lose/loose is one that I find myself correcting frequently as I write.
"Lose" with the single O and single E separated by the S phonetically stipulates a long O sound, like "dose" or "grope." The problem with "loose" is that, depending on what that E on the end is for, you get different pronunciations; it could be "lo
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Read those words...they should be spelled lös and löz or something like that (with something like an 'Ö' representing the 'oo' sound). The ending sounds are different, but spelled the same, and the middle sounds are the same, but spelled different. And you really expect people to get that? Oops, did I just start a sentence with a conjunction? I must be a moron. Anyway, the problem isn't that people are stupid (sometimes they are), it's that English was all but made to be misspelled. The
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OonDPGwAyfQ [youtube.com]
Lenka for your convincingness. Taylor Mali is amazonian
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I think this makes a lot of cents (Score:2)
They're our a lot better things to test then spelling. Know, with modern technology, kids can relay on computers to pick up on spelling mistakes and tests can concecrate on learning what students really NO
By then they should know better... (Score:2)
It's only fair. (Score:2)
Honestly, math students have been using calculators on exams for years now, and that's turned out well.
Forcing students to memorize the proper spelling of words is often ineffective, and teaching students to use the goddamn spellcheck would prevent far more errors.
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No, it really hasn't turned out well.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/12/04/AR2007120400730.html [washingtonpost.com]
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Except that has nothing to do with calculator use [questia.com]
Seriously, calculator use in Canadian schools is at least common as it is in the US, and they're outperforming the US alongside Japan and Korea. Think about what you say before you say it.
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"Forcing students to memorize the proper spelling of words is often ineffective, and teaching students to use the goddamn spellcheck would prevent far more errors."
That which you cannot spell, you may not be able to read.
Employers should use literacy tests to sort wheat from chaff.
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That which you cannot spell, you may not be able to read.
Employers should use literacy tests to sort wheat from chaff.
Learn how to use the goddamn tools available to you, like quote tags. You don't even need to write them yourself, you can just press the little "Quote Parent" button.
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It's turned out well for those that are doing advanced math for whom there are multiple simple calculations culminating in the final data set required to complete the tested conceptual exercise.
It's worked out quite poorly for students who actually need to learn and master multiplication, division, consistently correct addition and subtraction.
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That's what calculators are for.
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Having taught mathematics at the university, let me tell you: calculators have been a total disaster. You see students stare at "14/7" and reach for the calculator. Students have no feel for numbers whatsoever, and since they do all the arithmetic by calculator they have had no practice of the algebraic properties of arithmetic, and hence have also failed to learn algebra.
What about:
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* Using Sage/Maple/Mathematica/Wolfram Alpha to solve algebra and calculus problems.
A good portion of my Differential Equations class involved using how to learn Maple to solve Differential Equations. We didn't use it on tests of course, but they're valuable tools.
In an Engineering Statistics class, we used Excel's Data Analysis toolpack on tests, because "you're all Engineering and Computer Science students, this is what you're going to be doing in the real world, so I'm testing you on your ability to do it."
* driving a car in gym class instead of running?
I actually drive to the Gym, but feel a little silly for doing so. I switch off
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Why is that bad? If the computers are ubiquitous and students know how to use them correctly to do arithmetic, then what is really the point of learning the arithmetic? Unless you are a math major, and then the journey is its own reward. The human brain is notoriously inefficient—for both speed and accuracy—at doing this kind of thinking. What is wrong with teaching people the basics of algebra and symbolic manipulation, and leaving arithmetic to computers?
Of course, it is sad (as a math teach
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When I was in grade school, calculators weren't allowed until 7th grade (strictly banned from elementary school). Even then, they had to be simple calculators that couldn't solve complex problems (graphing calculators were strictly disallowed until high school). Approaching it like this forced the students to learn to do new kinds of problems by hand. The expectation was that by the time tools were given, students should already know how to accomplish the same things their calculators do for them.
I don't kn
Not a big deal (Score:2)
Now I feel old (Score:2)
Re:Now I feel old (Score:4, Interesting)
Calculators were forbidden in high school chemistry till we could show the teacher that we could use a slide rule properly. Then we could use calculators. If I remember correctly, this was the first class where calculators were allowed / suggested at all.
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I don't have a problem with allowing calculators... once the student has demonstrated that he can function without one. The same goes for spell-checkers. I'm happy that Firefox has it, and it helps me, but I can spell better than most people without one. These are tools, not crutches, or at least that's how their supposed to be used.
In an education environment where keyboarding and using PowerPoint are considered "computer science", we can only expect other similar nonsense.
Our schools (including higher
Lowering the bar so that Dumb people feel smart!? (Score:2)
This is just lowering the bar so that dumb people feel smart!
This does 2 things:
-Makes US High School Diplomas worthless (Hey, if the illiterate can get through HS, why would I want to hire one with a HS Diploma?)
-Gives a false sense of confidence when they go to college.(Results: more drop outs)
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This is just lowering the bar so that dumb people feel smart! This does 2 things: -Makes US High School Diplomas worthless (Hey, if the illiterate can get through HS, why would I want to hire one with a HS Diploma?) -Gives a false sense of confidence when they go to college.(Results: more drop outs)
I fail to see how illiterate people would benefit from a spelling checker. It's not a text to speech program--they would still have to string words together to form ideas, and write a semblance of the word for the spelling checker to offer the correct spelling.
And if the colleges allow spelling checkers--and any class that lets you type your paper in your dorm room does--then college performance won't be impacted.
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My point is:
w%d u hire sum1 hu finx dis S proper en or S unabl 2 tel d diff?
Translation courtesy of
http://www.lingo2word.com/translatetxt.php?searcher1=word&tosearch1=Create+Cool+Text+Messages+,+Just+Type+Your+Message+in+the+left+box [lingo2word.com]
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I've got a co-worker who constantly spells pretty as pritty, through as threw among other things. I make plenty of mistakes but that's just awful. He has a CS degree and I just think even if he knows his shit how can he expect to ever work his way up in a company w
Justification (Score:2)
I don't think I've ever heard a good justification for lowering standards.
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Too bad you don't work for the government then. They don't seem to have any people like you.
It's/its? (Score:3)
Like that'll stop them from the usual:
there/their
your/you're
and pretty much everything else listed here: http://theoatmeal.com/comics/misspelling [theoatmeal.com]
I'm a heavy user of spell check, but in no way do I think we should rely solely on that. I have friends who still think it's spelled "congradulations" and that's not a typo. That's just tragic.
Brilliant educators strike again... (Score:2)
I am totally discussed by this. They defiantly should not allow spell-checkers. Allot of people use spell-check as a crutch rather than a tool.
I see all three of those mistakes frequently and I can guarantee it's because of spell-checkers. It's just another step on the road towards our schools completely abandoning their jobs and turning out graduates who are even more useless in the workforce. Do I use a spell-checker? Yes. I tend to get confused between "-ant" and "-ent" on some words and other simi
What effort do you feel your audience is worth? (Score:2)
This is a good thing (Score:2)
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There are lots of grammar checkers and they're almost universally terrible because English is a horrible language to work with as a computer. We ignore half of our own grammatical rules and an awful lot of things that you write or say are dependent entirely on context for their meaning.
How about we take the traditional approach and make everyone do everything the hard way while they're at school? Once they're in the real world they can use all the cheats and short-cuts they want, but they should at least kn
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Done and done (Score:2)
This will "defiantly" fix the problem.
Good (Score:3)
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Wow.
Just wow.
I would have thought that, on a website full of people in programming and engineering (both fields where proper syntax and precision are critical), those people would understand the need for precise, standardized communication.
I guess I was wrong.
My faith in humanity dies a little more every day...
And I'd like to point out that the compiler points out your spelling errors. You already have this advantage, and thus don't have to think much about it. I really don't give a crap if a developer mistypes a variable or two, and has to correct it before it will compile. I do care, however, if a developer doesn't understand the difference between O(n) and O(logN).
Good riddance to wasted brainpower (Score:2)
OR... change the grading system (Score:2)
Just weight the grading system appropriately. Proper grammar, spelling, and punctuation is PART of writing. Make sure those who are able to construct sentences, spell, and punctuate at or above their level get sufficient credit for the multiple years of effort, but don't let minor errors stand in the way of a high grade on content.
60% Content (Response to question, validity of argument, validity of examples, complexity of argument)
20% Structure (Uses sentences and paragraphs to organize response. Uses topic
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For example, if you took a written exam and made 15 punctuation errors, you should be ineligible to receive an 'A' (95%). That level of error suggests the writer does not understand how to use punctuation, which is a large barrier to ensuring your readers un
why not let them use dragon? (Score:2)
why not let them use dragon?
What's an oregon? (Score:3)
bu wa hapnz wen? (Score:2)
wa hapnz wen shtoodinz speeleeng i zoh ba da du splell chexor don wurc rie?
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wa hapnz wen shtoodinz speeleeng i zoh ba da du splell chexor don wurc rie?
way happens went shoo-ins spieling I zoo bad ad du spell chador don work rye?
4/15 ain't bad! Of course, that made it less readable than the original... but I grade on content, not meaning.
HS Engish Department From Hell (Score:2)
- Two term papers each grade. Worth 20 or 30 percent of your final grade (could not remember which).
- Grammar errors -1 point each in term papers.
- Spelling errors -2 points each in term papers.
- It was possible to get a negative score on a term paper.
- All had to be typed. I typed at the paltry rate of 20wpm even after taking a typing class.
- One could not "graduate" 9'th grade
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And to top it off, I flubbed the title.
Derp.
--
BMO
we need more objective testing (Score:2)
It wasn't that long ago I went through school In university, we were forbidden to use calculators in any class where it would be an advantage.
In the classes we were allowed to, it was because it was going to be pointless... (we dealt mainly with variables...)
It got so bad, even on exams that needed a final numerical answer, I would just do all the calculations as variables... then when I had finished all the question, I'd go back and try and do the final calculations.
Today, that really helps me as a softwa
Hmm. This isn't about spelling. (Score:2)
I've lived in Oregon almost my whole life, and went through public school here. My first thought on reading this is that a number of district leaders who have historically poor performance measures must be pressuring the state to allow this. See, in Oregon, we have this extremely backwards system where if a district is slipping in terms of the students' performance on standardized tests, that district is punished by having funding taken away. This of course worsens the district still further, leading to mor
Spelling isn't a writing skill? (Score:2)
Seems to me that spelling is a proper subset of writing, yes? And therefore, proficiency in writing necessarily entails proficiency in spelling.
I think attention to correct spelling, grammar, and usage has largely fallen by the wayside because there it has become popular to criticize such attention to detail as being fussy or anal-retentive. People who point out these errors are derided for being pedantic, petty, and nitpicking. After all, if the meaning or intent is clear, why get hung up on the details
What if you don't need one? (Score:2)
I mean, I obviously would have demonstrated that I'd learned more.
Re:First Post (Score:4, Funny)
as for tests why not Google? The real would is not (Score:2)
as for tests why not Google? The real world is not closed book.
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Posting to remove bad moderation.
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"And the real world today lets people use spell checkers, so why not in non-English classes like the various sciences."
the irony inherent in that statement being that a good deal of specialized scientific language won't appear in most commercial spell-checkers anyway.
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Indeed. In English it should matter. In my other classes they never graded me on spelling anyway.
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Re:In what subject though? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm sure there's a class of people that are unable to spell correctly no matter how much time they have and how much of that time they apply to spelling accurately.
For that matter, faced with a written exam with a time limit -- people must decide how they use the limited time they have. Should I be rewarded because I am a champion speller, and can spend more time on the important parts of my composition, while others must devote more of their time to ensuring they spell correctly?
The other thing I'd like to add is that your perception of a correlation between poor spelling and poor grammar and clarity could present a problem -- graders who have that same perception are likely to grade exam-takers with poor spelling worse due to their bias against poor spellers. Maybe poor spelling has a greater impact on grading at high levels than you might suppose. Just food for thought...
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So basically you're saying that standards don't need to be as high as they currently are, and that we should lower them?
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As we're all aware, the skills one needs to succeed in society are complete static. Therefore, any attempt to remove "obsolete" skills from and educational program are clearly nothing more than an attempt to lower standards. And all these new skills they're teaching are useless anyway; if something needs to be remove it can be those silly things like "typing" and "operating a computer".
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Actually since we don't know what will be required in the workforce in 10 years or even 5 years, by your logic we should teach children nothing for fear that they'll learn what you consider to be "obsolete" things. God forbid we ask children to learn to use a library when there's the internet. Or learn spelling when there's spellcheck. Or horror of horrors, learn history when you can just do a Wikipedia search. Why on earth should we put any of that "useless" knowledge inside someone's head? You are rem
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I can't think of a class where you shouldn't know how to correctly spell nouns and use the words covered by that specialty. English may be fine for conversational topics, but technical language is just as important.
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... when the time comes for the kids to grow up, we'll just sell them as slaves to the Chinese.
...but they'll be illiterate. Would the Chinese want them?
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I suppose you had to walk uphill to school in the snow every day barefoot, too. It made you stronger and healthier, kids these days don't know how good they have it. I would expect /. at least to have less technophobia than this, realize that spell check is a tool that is going to be useful in our daily lives, and rote memorization of just about anything is becoming more and more ridiculous.
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So, because we have better technology we should lower standards for knowledge?
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Not at all, but the poster's point was that certain knowledge is no longer necessary, freeing up our minds for other types.
Which is the more useful skill, knowing facts that a reasonably intelligent person from, say, 20 years ago knows or knowing the concepts and being able to rapidly find the relevant facts? One is a task well suited for the human brain (concepts, relationships between concepts, etc), the other is just memorization. Like it or not, there are certain things that we just don't need to know
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Spelling exists the way it does for a reason;
Because someone arbitrarily decided that a word should be spelled a certain way in order to produce a dictionary?
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Since no one reads any more, our language is devolving at an alarming rate. I guess the schools are accommodating that trend. While it's very important to be taught actual grammar, the only way you're going to really learn it deep-down is by being exposed to a lot of good grammar, and the only place to find that is good books, and lots of them.
p.s. I think you mean "supposed".
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