I chose a PBS article that that discusses
how Australian educators are teaching short message service (SMS). Students are
learning how to practice with abbreviations common to text messaging. One point
that is important from the article is made by Professor John Frow, “English has
literary languages of different kinds, it’s got professional jargon, it’s got
sub-cultural languages, it’s got dialects…thinking about SMS is actually a way
of thinking about English, standard English and about the way it works, the way
it’s different from other languages…” The article argues that SMS should be
taught in order to teach students the range of language that exists in English.
They are teaching this particular form to get students to think about other
languages and how SMS can be used to link and move between languages.
I chose this PBS article because it
relates to the article by Janet McIntosh. In the town of Malindi, young people
use code-switching. When they code-switch, English is the language that is typically
abbreviated. English is the language that is always subject to manipulation. Youth
in Malindi use abbreviations with English rather than Kiswahili or Kiigiriama. These
English abbreviations or SMS are similar to those being taught to the
Australian students. English is
the language that can be used to violate rules. Just as the PBS article
discusses, English can be used this way because it is different from other
languages and can be manipulated in many different ways. The PBS article
discusses the global spread of English. Because of this global spread, English
is now mixed in with other languages, like Kiswahili and Kigiriama. A response to the article discusses
this new advancement in technology and how we must adapt new skills (learning
and using SMS) in order to communicate with one another.
I believe this article on the
teaching of SMS shows how language is a speech play. Similar to the article,
“Talking Text and Talking Back: “MY BFF JILL” from Boob Tube to YouTube,”
texting and using SMS allows for creative expression and knowledge rather than language
decay. The teachers teaching the SMS curriculum have the ideology that SMS
should be taught and used by students to enhance their literary skills.
However, other people have different ideologies, and think that SMS is keeping
students from learning proper English and is not acceptable to teach. In my
opinion the PBS article is saying that the use of English SMS is important for
everyone. It is important for everyone to learn in order to understand one
another. In code-switching, the youth in Malindi show the importance of SMS in
English because that is what they use collectively in texts. Only abbreviations
are made in English, therefore they must have a collective knowledge on how to
use it.http://www.pbs.org/teachers/learning.now/2006/10/do_students_need_to_learn_text.html
I found the article you attached very interesting and intriguing. It's amazing to think about how far technology has come in our society today when we are now having schools teach children the basics of SMS texting. I agree that language is a speech play and more and more people are starting to routinely code-switch from standard english to SMS abbreviation talk in their daily conversations like it's the new norm. I think it's important that kids do understand texting abbreviations and expressions in today's society, but I'm not so sure schools should be incorporating that into their curriculum. There are still too many Americans that struggle with professional writing, and that's what ultimately is needed in the workplace.
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