Even More Research: Technology Is Making Kids Better Writers, Not Worse

from the and-again-and-again-and-again dept

Every few months or so, we read about some freaked out reporter/columnist/pundit/politician complaining about how the internet and texting are destroying kids’ ability to write. Yet, pretty much every study on the subject has found the opposite to be true. Study after study after study after study after study have all found that kids today are better writers than in the past.

Clive Thompson writes about even more research on the subject, talking to a professor who suggests that, rather than “the death of writing” this is a renaissance:

“I think we’re in the midst of a literacy revolution the likes of which we haven’t seen since Greek civilization.”

That’s because people are constantly writing. Almost all of this communication actually involves writing. In the past, outside of school — or certain job functions, many people barely wrote at all. And, yes, kids use txt spk at times, but every generation changes and morphs the language. But, more importantly, kids are smart enough to know what’s appropriate when in most cases:

Lunsford’s team found that the students were remarkably adept at what rhetoricians call kairos?assessing their audience and adapting their tone and technique to best get their point across. The modern world of online writing, particularly in chat and on discussion threads, is conversational and public, which makes it closer to the Greek tradition of argument than the asynchronous letter and essay writing of 50 years ago.

But there’s also an interesting philosophical shift that he highlights. Since the type of writing and the audience is different than in the past, many younger people today approach writing in a different manner, and even have rethought what they consider to be good writing:

The fact that students today almost always write for an audience (something virtually no one in my generation did) gives them a different sense of what constitutes good writing. In interviews, they defined good prose as something that had an effect on the world. For them, writing is about persuading and organizing and debating, even if it’s over something as quotidian as what movie to go see. The Stanford students were almost always less enthusiastic about their in-class writing because it had no audience but the professor: It didn’t serve any purpose other than to get them a grade.

This is really fascinating when you think about it. Historically, many people haven’t been that concerned about their writing, because it didn’t matter. But, the more it matters, the more seriously they take it. This certainly doesn’t mean that everyone has become a good writer — far from it (just view any open comment forum). But, when people really care about what they’re saying, they tend to get better at it, and the internet gives more people more reasons to care. As for all the bad writing out there? It’s not a sign of the destruction of written English. Those people probably wouldn’t be writing much at all without the internet. So it’s actually a step up, relatively, from what they would have been doing in an alternate internetless universe.

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Comments on “Even More Research: Technology Is Making Kids Better Writers, Not Worse”

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28 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

“Even More Research: Technology Is Making Kids Better Writers, Not Worse”

Oh, I know I’m am much better able to write and debate and explain myself and express myself more clearly as a result of engaging in conversations over the Internet than I was able to several years ago. Sure, much of that could simply be that I learn as I get older but much of it is also the Internet. Then again, the Internet does take away from me reading textbooks, electronics books, programming books, and other books that I used to read a lot more before blogs were around. I also don’t really read the newspaper much anymore as a result of the Internet mostly because newspapers don’t cover topics that I’m interested in or at least they don’t fairly present all sides of an issue (something the Internet does a much better job of).

Hephaestus (profile) says:

writing ... just for a laugh ....

You asked who am I ….. That is a question I
have been asking for a very long time ….. I
have found the answer. I am, get this, The god
of Brussels Sprouts. Yes a true GOD. The reason I
haven’t written in so long is I have been in
training for this position for the past five
months. It is a very time consuming process
(training to be a GOD) even if it is a minor
deity, like the god of brussel sprouts. For this
position I had to take courses in agriculture,
farming and dancing (I’ll tell you about the
dancing part later).

I would have much prefered the position of the
god of War, a random fertility god or the god of
love. The problem is that to be the god of war
you need a degree in Electrical engineering (you
know throwing those lightning bolts and all). The
god of fertility had its good points (the good
points well (BLUSH) I think you can figure it
out). And the god of Love well that was a
position for a woman. They said I could have that
job, but only if I went to Sweden and started
wearing dresses (that ruled out that one).

The last one left open was the god of Brussel
sprouts. Well I went through all the training and
I was kind of curious as to why they had me take
dance lessons…… Until that graduation night
when they handed me my official GOD of Brussels
Sprouts uniform. It is this off green color…
and it has wings and a very cool glowing green
wand that makes things grow. My first night was
kind of fun Prancing through the fields the wings
flapping in the breeze, waving my wand and making
things grow. I can’t Wait until tomorrow.

My second night was fun, waving my wand jumping
fences in a single bound, until that horrible
electric fence almost killed me. After I ran into
it I tripped and fell into a cow pie. Well the
burns were not all that bad.

My third night and everything went wrong. I went
to surprise my mom out in Arizona. She thought I
was a burglar and took a shot at me…. when she
finally calmed down I tried talk to her and she
disowned me she said I was an embarrasment to the
family. I was so pissed when I left that I flew
right into a 20 foot tall Cactus. Stupid suit
will protect me from bullets but not cactus
needles, electricity, water, the salt that
farmers shoot at me. I hate this job.

My forth night and I almost lost it. A farmer
tracked me for eight miles because of that stupid
glowing green wand. He shot me with that salt
loaded shotgun about a dozen times (I have welts
all over my body). One good thing, he ran into
his own electric fence….. right after I did. I
Hate that farmer, This job. And the dry cleaner
who said If I am going to be rolling around in
Cow S**t night after night he is not going to
clean the suit anymore. So I got stuck cleaning
it and now my house smells like Cow S**t.

I QUIT. This putrid green spandex outfit and its
wings…. and a glowing green wand that the
farmers can see a mile away. How embarrasing
Prancing Through fields of Sprouts wearing that
horrible outfit (it doesn’t even have a cape that
flaps in the breeze just those F**king wings that
get stuck on every twig and branch). With Irate
(F**king) farmers shooting at you, Cow pies,
electric horse fences and barbwire. This was a
real poor job choice, I think I’ll look at the
job postings and see if the GOD of Thunder is
open. Then I’ll go visit that F**king farmer and
his electric fence.

Enrico Suarve says:

Re: writing ... just for a laugh ....

You know a farmer who puts an electric fence around his brussel sprouts? A tad extreme methinks, I grow sprouts and they rarely wander far

On the other hand this might explain why my crop has been crappy this this year, thanks for nothing

So you stick to wanding godboy and give me the farmers address, I’ll fill him in for you (think of it as outsourcing). While I’m at it I’ll even see if I can find out where he does his laundry

PS You wouldn’t know who to speak to about beans and peas would you?

PPS Is there a god of slugs and how many do I have to kill before I am damned eternally?

ojkelly (profile) says:

I cannot agree more that technogoly and the internet has made me a better writer. Far better than say my english class back in school.

It really comes do to, the more you practice it, the better you get. The internet is just a communications platform at the end of the day, and the easiest method of communication is through text.

So we all write. A lot.

Ben (profile) says:

MMO typing lessons

In highschool I had typing class. 20 WPM was the minimum to pass, noone took the course seriously, especially the male members. We goofed around. We did as little as possible. Even the teacher had little thought about this particular course. I passed. I had 21WPM.

After I graduated, too pass my time I started playing FFXI. I was a Black Mage. I made some friends, we chatted while playing. Thing was I didn’t have a lot of time while fighting to talk, but I tried anyway. Cast spell, type something real quick, cast another spell, another spell, heal, type something, get up and cast. Talk to the people I was fighting with to coordinate, type something to a friend, cast a spell. It was dificult at first and seems a confusion, perhaps it was.

I can type at 40WPM with one hand now. Not only has my speed doubled, I need half the hands. Sure I can use both, I am right now, but I can get by quite well with only one. The only experience I had at the time was MMO gaming. I had no other practice. MMO is internet.

Anonymous Coward says:

This seems true of lots of technology…when I was younger…

Digital watches/clocks were wrecking our ability to read regular clocks.
Hand-held digital calculators were ruining our math skills.
Word processing was killing our hand-writing skills.
Television and video games were turning our brains to mush.

Somehow we still manage to read clocks, do math, write things down and generally be productive. Imagine that, some things just got easier and now we can do more complicated things.

Anonymous Coward says:

“Oh, I know I’m am much better able to write and debate and explain myself and express myself more clearly as a result of engaging in conversations over the Internet than I was able to several years ago. Sure, much of that could simply be that I learn as I get older but much of it is also the Internet. Then again, the Internet does take away from me reading textbooks, electronics books, programming books, and other books that I used to read a lot more before blogs were around. I also don’t really read the newspaper much anymore as a result of the Internet mostly because newspapers don’t cover topics that I’m interested in or at least they don’t fairly present all sides of an issue (something the Internet does a much better job of).”

No one else noticed the errors above? Was this a troll attempt? No one saw it? 😐

Janey says:

Re: So why hasn't it shown up in the article here?

The English language often uses emphatic phrases which in effect say the same thing twice. This is perfectly acceptable and it is fatuous to say that some of the sentence should be cut out and it would have the same effect. It wouldn’t.
Anyway, I am not sure that “this is fascinating” and “when you think about it” are a repetition. Something can surely be fascinating without thinking about it for more than a moment, or it can become fascinating only when you do think about it.

Abram (user link) says:

spread wide but thin

My observation is that, while a much greater percentage of the population writes much more often, the quality of the writing, both in form and substance, is inferior to that of former generations of writers. I certainly noticed this with post-secondary education–while many more people have a university education, the quality of that education has deteriorated significantly. I notice glaring spelling and grammatical errors all over the place in ads, newspapers, magazines, books, etc. This deterioration of language, both in spoken and written form, is becoming increasingly evident among professors as well as also in the academic publications that contain their work. I suppose anything spread far and wide ends up stretched thin and spotty.

Bridget (profile) says:

Better writers, not worse...

I found this to be an interesting discussion. As a teacher you do begin to wonder if the whole technology explosion issue is having a negative effect on writers. I found this article both refreshing and inspiring. Of course technology is for a wider audience and totally valid way for children to be seen as publishers from an early age. It’s cool that kids can put a slideshow up or a voice thread to send to a grandma living hundreds or thousands of miles away! My own class of 8 year olds do online collaborative writing projects on our class wiki and they absolutely love it. Like the article says maybe lots of those kids would not be writing much at all if it weren’t for online collaboration.

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