Throughout numerous years of education and countless hours logged in a classroom environment, it’s interesting to look back and see how little language changed. Even though there were a variety of different instructors and school administrators through my twelve year stint in the
As elementary schools began sprouting up all over my community, my classmates and I were herded around to each one based on location. After attending two different elementary schools within five minutes of one another, my parents finally settled at Trailblazer Elementary. The majority of students in my community were from white-collar affluent families, and arrived at school already with the primary foundations of reading and writing engrained into their brains. As English classes progressed through the years, vocabulary and close reading objectives filled out course work. Spelling and grammatical accuracy were the primary areas teachers focused on as they read through the pounds of essays, summaries, and daily oral languages that were turned in on a weekly basis. Spelling tests on the “vocabulary of the week” were hammered into our brains on Mondays and studied every night throughout the week in the hopes of increasing our awareness on the importance of choosing the right words based on their individual meanings.
Although there were segments of the day devoted entirely to reading and summarizing a piece literature, teachers still encouraged students to circle words that they did not understand and then go back and use context clues to surmise the definition of the word. Individual reading did occur outside of the classroom, we were encouraged to read for twenty minutes a night, but during in class activities teachers would ask students to read aloud as they “pop-corned” around the classroom. The pop-corn method of reading aloud frightened the majority of my classmates, who were either embarrassed about their reading slow or stuttering reading styles or those who were forced to shyly admit they hadn’t been following along when called upon. Students who were at the upper end of the class in literacy where also annoyed with the slow pace in which the next was read, and would prefer to read ahead silently and then be ridiculed by the teacher for not remaining with the rest of the class. Despite the countless groans and protestations of students teachers even throughout my high school years continued using the popcorn style of reading in their classrooms; causing even greater amounts of humiliation to those students who had different reading styles.
Spelling gradually faded into the background as I progressed through the schooling system in Douglas County, Colorado. At the beginning of middle school, English teachers shifted from a curriculum based primarily on increasing vocabulary and focused instead on one of grammatical rules that a student must always follow in their writing. The proper placement of periods, commas, and all other forms of punctuation occupied our lesson times and papers were often returned with red marks citing the incorrect usage of grammar instead of the actual content or quality of the piece. English teachers even wanted their peers of different content areas to focus on the correct use of grammar and punctuation is our written works. Science, history, and health teachers all broke out their trusty red pens and made sure that all of our papers bled when the slightest misuse of a word or punctuation appeared. The intensity of red ink only continued into high school when our freshmen English teacher banned the use of major conjunctions in our writing. FANBOYS was dreaded throughout high school because if either for, and, nor, but, or, yet, or so appeared in our writing our grade was automatically deducted by five points.
Even with the intensity of grammatical correctness being cracked over or heads, high school saw the focus of English classes stem from proper writing techniques to the development of our ideas and beliefs in critical essays and compare and contrast pieces. Learning to write high-end academic essays while completely voiding our papers of how we would normally write was difficult to do, and subsequently many of my classmates fell behind. Eventually the essays became easier to write but the “forbidden words” were still rampant in all of our pages. Luckily, not all of the teachers at
Looking back on all my years of schooling, the phases in which students learned vocabulary, grammar, and analytical writing were all very distinct. The basic five paragraph essay became an obsolete lesson of third grade coupled with spelling, while the importance of developing a great critical analysis of work remained throughout my college years. Although a majority of lessons in grammar have stayed with me, it was easy to bid adieu to FANBOYS long ago, and its still sends a little ripple of pride when they appear in my paper, simply knowing that those coveted five points still belong to me.