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Conceptions of Language and Grammar

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key concepts

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The study of language
The roles of the English teacher
What is a language?
Competence and performance
Approaches to the study of language

THE STUDY OF LANGUAGE
The study of spoken and written language occupies a significant part of contemporary primary and secondary school and university curricula. The grammars, handbooks of style, and composition texts used in these curricula are based on various assumptions about language and about why it should be studied. It is important that teachers have a critical understanding of these assumptions, which in many instances are either indirectly stated or omitted entirely. These books are designed to help you to:
  •  develop the critical resources you need as a teacher to respond to many language-related issues; 
  •  understand the many concepts needed to talk appropriately and accurately about language;
  • develop skills that you will use in everyday teaching of language, literature, reading, and writing.
In the pages to follow you will encounter ideas about language that may be new to you and which may contradict ideas you’ve been taught. We cannot guarantee that these new concepts will be easy to master, but we do believe that they are worth your best efforts. We will, as we said earlier, try to begin with what you know about language. For example, you have probably been taught to avoid non-standard expressions such as seen or seed instead of saw, to avoid multiple nouns as modifiers, to make sure that your subjects and verbs agree, to use parallel structures where possible, and the like. These are usage rules. They have at least two jobs to do. First, they help define the standard variety of English—recall our question in our introductory chapter that asked you to consider why anything, e.g., electrical outlets, might be standardized. You probably answered by saying that standardization allows the greatest number of people to use it for the greatest number of purposes. You might also have added that if something is standardized, then it can be maintained in that form for a long period of time. Standardizing a language has the same goals: to allow as many people as possible to communicate effectively with each other, and to allow people at any time to read texts that were written perhaps hundreds of years before they were born, much as we read the novels of Jane Austen now. And standardization allows us to write texts that will be understood by many generations to come.  The usage rules help ensure that standard English is used in formal writing and speaking so as to make our writings and speeches clear, efficient, and effective, given our purposes in communicating and the characteristics of our audiences. Rules that tell us which forms to choose (saw not seen or seed as past tense of see), or what syntactic patterns to avoid (multiple noun modifiers), or to use (parallel structures) are prescriptive. Ideally they prescribe what are taken to be the most generally used formal writing and speaking practices at a particular time. Usage rules are extremely important. Speakers and writers who violate them are likely to be judged harshly. It is a major part of any teacher’s job to ensure that students can write in accordance with these rules. They can be found in composition textbooks, which often devote entire sections to them; they can also be found in writers’ handbooks of usage rules, in usage dictionaries, or in selected entries in desk dictionaries. Unfortunately, these handbooks do not always agree with each other and do not always keep up with the accepted writing practices in important genres. Moreover, the conventions differ from one discipline to another. However, for teachers to be able to teach the usage rules, they must understand the concepts that underlie them and the terminology in which they are expressed. For example, they must know what nouns are, be able to recognize them in texts and to produce examples of them on demand; what “past tense” means and how it is formed; what “agreement” means and how it is expressed; which structures are parallel and which are not; and what participles are so that they will be able to recognize them when they “dangle,” or to teach them in order to expand the range of structures their students can use in their writing. And they must be aware of current usage controversies.  You may know about some of these things. For example, you may know about the traditional parts of speech, about subjects and predicates, about direct and indirect objects. In this book we will develop all these and related ideas by making use of the findings of modern linguistic and discourse studies. Our point of view will be descriptive rather than prescriptive. That is, rather than prescribing how someone thinks the language should be, we will attempt to describe as objectively as we can as much of modern standard English as space allows. Our descriptive stance is that of linguistics in general, which tends to think of itself as scientific.
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