Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Renee's writing construct


M. Renee Benham
September 4, 2012
Writing Construct Proposal
            “The majesty and grandeur of the English language; It’s the greatest possession we have.”[1] At least, that’s what Professor Henry Higgins told Eliza while drilling “The rain in Spain stays mainly on the plain” at one in the morning.  Eliza believed his statement and mastery of “correct” language changed her life.  In American schools, the rules of punctuation and grammar are drilled into our supple young minds until we can repeat them well enough to pass into the next grade.  In college applications, job resumes, and those ghastly computer-skills tests applicants must pass before even being considered for state employment, the rules of grammar haunt us.  Yet what if the entire subject of grammar is a construct?  Elizabeth Wardle and Doug Downs define constructs as “mental frameworks that people build in order to make sense of the world around them. One of the key features of an effective construct is that it quickly begins to seem “natural” or inevitable, rather than made-up” (35).  What if none of it really matters?  John Dawkins writes that “what ‘good writers’ do, writers like Orwell, is punctuate according to their intended meaning, their intended audience” (141).  He suggests that the “rules” should be more like the pirates code, providing guidelines that are only sometimes followed, if it suits the situation (Dawkins 142).  As long as correct meaning is conveyed, perhaps a double parallelism and subject-verb disagreement is not the end of the world.  Yet we have to draw the line somewhere, don’t we?  We cannot simply start wandering around making up words and ignoring punctuation willy-nilly.  For starters, I won’t understand you.  And the loss of understanding would negate the entire purpose of standardized grammar.  I argue that, as a freshman composition teacher, I need to teach my students the value and benefits of standardized (MLA) grammar and punctuation guidelines, while simultaneously challenging the common belief that good grammar denotes good writing and encouraging their creativity to write as “good writers” do. 


[1] http://www.allmusicals.com/lyrics/myfairladyscript/myfairladyscript.htm

No comments:

Post a Comment