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Y txtng cn b v gd 4 improving
linguistic ability of children
GR8 news. Text message “shorthand” may help youngsters
to improve their literary skills. Far from eroding children’s language,
as widely feared, texting can increase children’s phonetic awareness and
linguistic creativity, research suggests. A study of the spelling and
punctuation of 11-year-olds who regularly use mobile text messaging
found no difference between their attainment and the average achievement
levels of non-texting pupils of the same age and educational level.
Bev Plester, who conducted the study, said that there
appeared to be a strong positive relationship between children’s
attainment in standard English and the sophistication of their texting.
“There is no evidence to link text messaging among children to a poorer
ability in standard English and those children who were the best at
using textisms were also found to be the better spellers and writers,”
she told the British Psychological Society in London yesterday.
Publication of the research comes amid growing concern
about the effect of new technologies on children’s ability to
communicate.
An estimated nine million children in the UK under the
age of 15 own mobile phones, and growth in the market is being driven by
the under-10s. The average age for children to be given their first
mobile phone has fallen to 8, and a million youngsters between the ages
of 5 and 9 now own one.
Mobile phone use is now so much a part of youth
culture that it has been incorporated into some educational material,
with summaries of classics such as Shakespeare plays sent to pupils’
mobiles in text format.
Fears that texting might be harming language
development arose after examination boards and teachers noticed a
growing number of textisms in children’s schoolwork and exam scripts.
But Ms Plester’s research suggests that this is not necessarily a bad
thing.
Ms Plester, a psychologist at Coventry University, and
her colleague Clare Wood, invited 35 children aged 11 who used mobile
phones to complete a questionnaire about their mobile phone use. They
were asked to translate messages between standard English and text
language, as well as to complete tasks to reveal their English, writing,
reading and spelling abilities.
The results showed that the children were far more
likely to use their mobile phones for texting than for talking. Most
text abbreviations were phonetically based, such as “wot” for “what” and
rebus — or puzzle — types, such as “C U L8r”.
Many of the children also used “youth code” or casual
language such as “dat fing”, “gonna” or “wanna”. The most commonly used
acronym was “wuu2”, for “what are you up to?” The children who were best
at spelling used the most textisms.
Ms Plester said that the children had developed a
highly sophisticated command of different linguistic registers. “They
know when to use standard English and when to use textisms or genteel
gangster speech, such as ‘dat fing’. If they allow text language to
enter their school or exam work, it is probably because they are doing
it on purpose to make a point, such as demonstrating a lack of respect .
. . It is not because they do not know how to spell or write.”
What are you doing tonight? Can you come out to the
cinema? Wot u doin 2nit Cn U cm 2 cnma
I cannot come out. I have too much homework to do. Cnt
cm out 2 mch hmwk
Alexandra Frean
9 September 2006
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2-2349412,00.html
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