Showing posts with label students. Show all posts
Showing posts with label students. Show all posts

Sunday, June 5, 2011

Literacy

Today in the Muskegon Chronicle there was an opinion piece about the need for basic education to insure literacy in our high school graduates.  The writer gave an example of an adult who asked for help on a project that had several misspelled simple words.

We have done a wonderful job of making sure everyone feels good about themselves, but a terrible job of making sure they are functionally literate. The papers I grade in my nursing classes are generally well done, but several illustrate that grammar has been moved to the back burner in our schools.  Students are unable to discern between their, there, or they're, or its and it's.  They have no idea when to use an apostrophe.  They don't know how to construct sentences and  think it's completely appropriate to use common texting abbreviations.  Not only are the written assignments sometimes unreadable, today's students don't speak appropriately.

My biggest issue with speech is the improper use of seen and saw.  At least once a day, I hear a someone say, "I seen" or "I done." The people in the media add to the problem.  They frequently interview people who have no command of proper English and don't edit their responses.  Comedians have made fortunes telling jokes about people who are interviewed after their alien abductions and created laughs by making fun of their uneducated way of speaking.  Now we see that way of speaking creeping into the mainstream.

My fear is that we will grow so accustomed to improper grammar that the traditional rules will no longer apply.  I'm not at all perfect, but I try.  I also try to make a difference with my students by correcting them when I see or hear them use the incorrect tense of a word.  Truly, the English language is becoming a lost art.

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Tough day

Today was difficult for me. I had to deal with several students who failed one of my classes. Nursing 123 is different from any class they have ever taken. Instead of memorizing facts and regurgitating them, they have to KNOW the material and THINK about how it applies to a situation. Unfortunately, they haven't always had classes that challenged them to think.

In Nursing 123 the students are introduced to more advanced levels of questions than they have ever seen before. Simply remembering bits of information will not guarantee success. Former "A" students see grades like they have never seen. One such student was in my office today.

This particular student failed the course. I believe she came in thinking she could convince me to give her the points she needed on the final to pass the course. The final wasn't the test that failed her. She had a failing grade before the exam. I don't think she realized that she is not the first person to try to argue her way to a passing grade. She argued almost every question she missed on the exam, hoping that I would see her side. She said she needed 4 questions on the final to give her a passing grade. Did she really think she could bully me into giving her 4 questions after the test was reviewed by faculty? While I appreciate her situation, I had to put my foot down and tell her she was not going to win the fight. I hate being put into the role of bad guy.

I think my biggest complaint about today's confrontation is that I wasn't even the lead instructor for the course. The lead instructor took today off--the day after the final. She should have been the one who handled the students who came by, as I would have done if I were in the position. I'm so used to the way we handled office hours in Texarkana. If you weren't in clinical you were in the office 5 days a week. I don't think I'll ever understand the instructors who maintain only the minimum required number of hours. I want to be accessible to students. That's why I'm here. Plus, our new offices are so darned nice. I really enjoy working in mine!