Monday, June 23, 2014

Inspirational Monday: Guest Post From Nikolas Baron

Break the Rules, Learn a Lesson
I know what you're thinking: Well, the title is a big “of course!” When we break the rules, we learn our lesson. If we steal something, we get caught, and we have to face the consequences. Why should I even pay attention to this guy? Well, random Internet reader, you should pay attention to me because I'm not talking about obvious lessons here. I'm not talking about the consequences for stealing a candy bar or a car. I'm talking about a different lesson, a positive one – one your students will be able to use their entire academic career. Specifically, I'm talking about lessons that teach you to write properly.
Let me drop a hypothetical: One day, I decide to teach sentence fragments to a student. I sit down with a list of sentences, explain how a complete sentence requires both a subject and a verb, and then go over the sentences with the student to find fragments. Oh yeah, and in doing all of this, I also put the student to sleep. Sitting and listening to rules is bad enough, but to then be forced to apply those rules on a series of bland, unrelated sentences? Boring! How, then, should I teach something like sentence fragments without putting my hypothetical student to sleep? I think an easy and fun way to do that is to encourage him or her to break the rules. Encourage writers to write as many fragments as possible and see where it takes their writing.
Now, don't get me wrong. I encourage properly-written English. In my work with Grammarly, I research how people write and what tools they use to become better writers. In fact, over at Grammarly, we created a grammar check that considers over 250 rules for any given piece of text. I love good grammar. Beyond that, I understand its importance outside my job as well. In your student's academic career, she will probably have to write hundreds of things, from resumes to academic papers. Good grammar ensures that what she writes looks competent.
That said, I also understand that it's important to have fun when you write. And what's more fun than breaking the rules? Most first-year college students have a poor opinion of writing, and that's not surprising. All through school, they've been hammered with grammatical rules, such as “a complete sentence needs a subject-verb combo” and “a comma separates a dependent clause from its respective independent clause.” There are so many rules, and they are so complex, students' heads often end up swimming by the time they reach semicolons.
To be fair, you could just send them to Grammarly and let us find the errors for them. We're fine with that. But, wouldn't it be much more fun to teach them these rules from the ground up, so they grow up with a healthy understanding of proper English? That way, they might not feel lost when they get to college and realize that passing English Composition is required, regardless of their program.
How then can we use breaking the rules to our advantage? By not only encouraging them to break the rules but also rewarding them for doing so. Make it a game. In my sentence fragment example above, what if I would have encouraged my hypothetical student to write as many fragments as possible and then evaluated his or her writing based on the number of fragments? From the student's perspective, that would have probably been way more interesting. “You mean, I get to break the rules? And you're not going to fail me for it?” From the teacher's perspective, it gets even better than that. In order to write a fragment, our fictional student would have to know what a fragment sentence is, and if they're engaged in the lesson, they're going to learn. If you had multiple students, you could even turn it into a competition. Have everyone write a story using sentence fragments; the person who uses the most wins!
Now, to be fair, this idea may not work with every grammatical error. That said, if you do some creative adjustment, I think you'll find you can adapt this idea to a lot of different writing lessons. The key is to engage the students in writing and thinking about the rules, so they can learn them... even if in doing so, they break a few rules along the way.
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Bio:
Nikolas discovered his love for the written word in Elementary School, where he started spending his afternoons sprawled across the living room floor devouring one Marc Brown children’s novel after the other and writing short stories about daring pirate adventures. After acquiring some experience in various marketing, business development, and hiring roles at internet startups in a few different countries, he decided to re-unite his professional life with his childhood passions by joining Grammarly’s marketing team in San Francisco. He has the pleasure of being tasked with talking to writers, bloggers, teachers, and others about how they use Grammarly’s online proofreading application to improve their writing. His free time is spent biking, traveling, and reading.


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