*".... the limits of your language are the limits of your world.” ...  *

*Ludwig Wittgenstein *Please read article for importance of teaching
students to write well .... this is important both for them to write their
exams ... and generally to write well in life ...

Source http://www.deccanherald.com/content/561426/art-english-writing.html

The art of English writing
Sharmila Narayana, August 01, 2016

Urgent intervention of teachers, at school and college/university levels,
is needed to inculcate good writing skills.

Only a few schools and colleges in the country actually teach their
students the art of writing the English language. Yet, these educational
institutions expect their students to write ‘good’ descriptive answers,
especially in the humanities and social sciences. Today, college and
university students suffer from poor writing skills because schools choose
to ignore their responsibility to train students in the art of writing.

Writing often becomes a traumatic experience for students due to lack of
practice. True, everyone is not a born writer, but this is a skill that can
be acquired through writing. Any skill, over time, erodes if not put to
use, which applies equally to writing too. Moreover, computers are yet to
replace final assessment exams, which are still handwritten. The fact that
students are more comfortable with typing into computers, than writing in
long hand, makes the three-hour exam an ordeal as they have to over-exert
their hand muscles to write.

Unlike in Western countries, where reading and writing go hand in hand and
are equally important, our education system tolerates all sorts of
‘violations’ to the written format. With the advent of mobiles, the use of
SMS language has prolifically crept into academic writings. Besides
inappropriate vocabulary, several students liberally use abbreviations that
do not necessarily convey their thoughts, adequately or correctly.

In today’s ‘gizmo-obsessed’ age, everything is available in ‘compact’ form
which makes our lives easier and simpler. The click of a button provides
immense information, makes global transactions possible, helps connect with
people from different geographies and what not, all seated inside our home.

Unfortunately, this online information overload also breeds a ‘copy-paste’
generation. In the process, good writing skills get butchered brutally
amongst the student community. This makes teaching English language,
specifically writing skills, that much more of a challenge. Only a
structured and organised piece of writing reflects clarity of thought that
the writer has developed, to ensure coherence and logical flow.

The 20th century Austrian philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein aptly stated that
“the limits of your language are the limits of your world.” Language is a
means to express ones’ thoughts and ideas clearly and effectively. The
‘compact generation’ cannot afford to reduce the art of writing to a
‘capsule format’.

The dependence on power point style of presentations lead to its overuse
and wean students away from effective note-taking. In fact, writing most
often gets reduced to bullet points and all etiquette of writing – to
maintain a margin or a proper paragraph format – are blatantly flouted.
What is even more appalling is that most often, students are not even
conscious about these oversights.

Another shocking fact is that students who are weak in writing skills would
have actually scored over 80% in their high school Board exams. The
requirement to read, research and expand the horizon of knowledge gets
drowned in the whirlpool of ‘instant’ information available. As reading
habits deteriorate, it inevitably impacts writing skills too.
Today, English has proved to be a global language and a medium that
connects all academic and professional disciplines. It is necessary to
inculcate good writing skills in students and it is the responsibility of
all subject teachers and not English teachers alone.

Any error in the use of language, even in history, geography, economics or
science assignments cannot be ignored by these subject teachers. It has to
be a shared responsibility. The need to develop sharp and strong writing
skills has to be emphasised and practiced at the school level itself. The
habit of ‘generous’ marking for shoddy writing, should cease.

‘Ethical’ writing

Stress has to be laid on the importance of ‘ethical’ writing which is
integral to research and independent writing. This implies the need to
refrain from mindless acceptance of the printed word and the tendency to
articulate it as one’s own thoughts. Good academic writing should be
incorporated into the curriculum and be made one of the criteria for
students’ evaluation, irrespective of their discipline.

Writing is an art that needs to be nurtured through use, and maintained in
all its purity. To mess with this art, amounts to a ‘criminal offence’.
According to the renowned 16th century essayist Francis Bacon, “Reading
maketh a full man; Conference a ready man; and writing an exact man”. In
this technology driven ‘compact’ world, there are no short cuts devised
yet, to master the art of writing.

If words have to spontaneously overflow in a lucid and an effective manner,
it is necessary to constantly dabble with them. In turn, this makes it
imperative, to develop a strong reading habit too. While reading by itself
may not make one a good writer, it certainly would be the first step to
doing so.

It is indeed a daunting task to ensure that the English language is free
from corruption as we live in an age driven by media and technology. Urgent
intervention of teachers, both at the school and college/university levels,
is necessary to inculcate good writing skills in the student community. The
American writer, Bill Wheeler rightly points out “good writing is clear
thinking made visible.”

(The writer is an Associate Professor who teaches English at School of Law,
Christ University, Bengaluru
-- 

<http://www.ITforChange.net/>*Gurumurthy Kasinathan* | Director
IT for Change <http://www.itforchange.net/>
(*In special consultative status with the United Nations ECOSOC)*
91-80-26654134 | 91-9845437730
Email:[email protected]
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