Txting develops spelling skills, how gr8

by | Friday, January 28, 2011

Scott Graden is Superintendent of Saline Area Schools and a blogger. He recently posted about a study that indicated that texting helps students develop vocabulary skills. Though he was skeptical of the finding, I am not sure I was as surprised. He cited a news story on ReadWriteWeb titled Research Finds Text-Messaging Improves Children’s Spelling Skills. The story says,

… a new study from Coventry University finds no evidence that having access to mobile phones harms children’s literacy skills. In fact, the research suggests that texting abbreviations or “textisms” may actually aid reading, writing and spelling skills.

The story goes on the say that

Based on a series of reading and spelling tests, researchers found a “significant contribution of textism use to the children’s spelling development during the study.” The study made it clear that it wasn’t the access to the phone per se, or even the text-messaging as much as specifically the use of textisms that aided the development. The reason, writes Dr. Clare Wood, one of the authors of the study, “is partly explained by the highly phonetic nature of the textisms that are popular within this age group, as the phonological and alphabetic awareness that is required for the construction and decoding of these textisms also underpin successful reading development.”

Scott, who is far from being a techno-phobe, was not sure if he actually bought into the findings of this study. He was surprised by it and also questioned its validity. He is not alone in espousing this point of view. As I had written earlier, in a post titled, Technology & Literacy, bemoaning the youth of today 🙂, technology is not destroying our ability to write, it just changing the way we do so. I don’t want to repeat what I had written earlier, so go there and take a look and let me know what you think?

Is Scott right? Is txt-ing destroying writing as we know it? Let me know.

Topics related to this post: Blogging | Philosophy | Representation | Teaching | Technology

A few randomly selected blog posts…

Wong, Mishra, Koehler & Adams (2007)

Wong, D., Mishra, P., Koehler, M.J., & Adams, S. (2007). Teacher as Filmmaker: iVideos, Technology Education, and Professional Development. To appear in M. Girod & J. Steed (Eds.), Technology in the college classroom. Stillwater, Oklahoma: New Forums Press. Abstract:...

John McCain, RIP

John McCain, RIP

• • • • • • • • •John Sidney McCain IIIAugust 29, 1936 – August 25, 2018 The above image is a visual / typographic representationof one his favorite quotesfrom For whom the bell tolls,by Ernest Hemingway Image © punyamishra

The Ethics of Dallas Clayton

I just stumbled upon Dallas Clayton's website. Lots of stuff there to enjoy... here's a short poem (as a sampler). ETHIC A father stands at the lip of the wharf with his daughter who is only three. They watch sea lions lounging about in the sun full with fish dazed...

The more things change…

I had posted earlier about a recent commercial that, though arguing at one level that technology can fundamentally change education, seemed to stick to the standard-lecture (albeit in different and cooler modes of transmission). Just how little the discourse around...

Slumdog night (and Rahman)

Slumdog rolled into the Oscars tonight. More important to me were the two Oscars for A. R. Rahman for original score and song. It is time that the world recognized his genius. Here is a cartoon by Kaladhar Bapu from his site Point Blank A.R. Rahman by Kaladhar Bapu

Multitasking & the learner

Multitasking & the learner

One of the myths of the new digital generation is that they are natural multi-taskers. The evidence, however, indicates that multi-tasking is detrimental to performance and success, and  though we may try delude ourselves, the fact of the matter is that, we do...

William Kamkwamba, TED talk

I had written a couple of days ago about William Kamkwamba, a Malawian high school student who built a windmill by looking at pictures in a book. From Bob Reuter's website (Keep IT Simple!) I discovered a TED talk that William had given in England, back in July....

YouTube & Research

In a previous post I mentioned a new study on children and the internet recently completed by Warren Buckleitner for Consumer Reports Web Watch. Anyway, towards the end of the post I mentioned how the final report includes links to YouTube videos of the actual data...

Alien games paper, published

I had posted earlier that a paper on gender and video games had been accepted for publication. Well, it is published now, full reference, abstract and link to PDF given below. Heeter, C., Egidio, R., Mishra, P., Winn, B., & Winn, J. (2008). Alien Games: Do girls...

6 Comments

  1. SEO Writing

    Great thought. I agree with that. It is really moor informative. It helps children to improve their skill. Thanks for sharing that information.

    Reply
  2. Degree in Criminology

    Hi I might have to disagree with one comment above about having texting allowed in classrooms. This might be taking it a bit too far in my opinion. Sure texting is a great communication tool – but it also a very big distraction. That is why you are seeing lawmakers across north america looking to change driving laws and even pedestrian laws to fine people who use texting devices at the same time. A little off subject but in some cases people are actually risking their lives texting – especially behind the wheel…as for classrooms, literacy levels are already being challenged, so why throw in another distraction?

    Reply
  3. acer h233h

    If it’s texting in short form, my perspective is after sometime, people will forget the real word. Some of my friends write formal emails with the “coz”, “nvm” etc, because they’re so used to it. I personally make it a habit to type full words even in text.

    Reply
  4. Beth Rogers

    My 16 year old son writes all night long – texting, posting on Facebook and other forums. He doesn’t view this as reading and writing, just communicating. I long for the day when students are able to use these applications in the classroom – imagine the engagement and learning if we asked them to translate a passage of Romeo and Juliet into texting, Facebook posts or Twitter!

    Reply
  5. Peter

    It will probably take a couple more years and a reliable methodology to get a definitive study on texting and its effects on children today. My kids text all the time but I also make sure they don’t bring texting to school.

    Reply
  6. Mint

    Children need to be made aware of when using texting language is appropiate and when not.

    Reply

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. Tweets that mention Txting develops spelling skills, how gr8 | Punya Mishra's Web -- Topsy.com - [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by punya, remind101. remind101 said: RT @punyamishra Txting develops spelling skills, how gr8…

Leave a Reply to Peter Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *