Published
I've noticed some new professionals with an apparent lack of basic grade-school grammar and spelling skills? This trend is concerning given the respect and perception of intelligence any particular profession retains. :redbeathe Permanent records with misspells, resume's with misspells and grammar errors seem to be on the rise (not to mention our spoken language). :imbar Please disregard our last president, though...maybe it all started then?I'm not sure if it's a lack of education at the grade school level but my 9 year old son was pointing out spelling errors on this site (my 9 year old)!
Has anyone else seen this trend?
I'm not meaning to offend anyone; with such a tight market, these errors would get a resume discarded/a letter of intent for a nursing school rejected for an Eng 099 class.
What do you think?
Castle,
I haven't necessarily noticed that poor grammar and spelling are correlated with any one generation in particular. Take a look at your first sentence. It's a declarative statement, not an interrogative statement. That means that it should be punctuated with a period as opposed to a question mark. :loveya:
I am not taking offense or defending myself either, but in all honesty, when I type on here, I will admit that I am a tad lazy. Not to offend anyone, as I think every person on here is important, but I view everyone on here as a friendly/casual conversation, not necessarily a future employer, etc. I was in AP English courses and I even took two semesters of English at the community college during high school. In elementry/middle school, I had excellent marks in English, and spoke well as a child. However, allnurses.com aside, I have forgotten a lot of the proper grammer and spelling rules, and I do have to use spellcheck at times. When I am submitting a cover letter, resume, or an email to someone in a business matter, I have the common sense to use spellcheck. I think having spellcheck as a safety net to begin with has subconciously allowed me to be lazy - unfortunately.
PS: I am not rereading this message to check for errors lol, and I am young and a new grad, so perhaps this validates your thread :-)
Hey, you missed one...I've is British not American *don't believe that's accepted here yet
I'm sorry, I didn't clarify; I was mentioning repeated, consistent errors with commonly spelled words and just basic stuff; not quick typing which will definitely cause mistakes (we all do that :redbeathe)
I certainly didn't want to hurt or offend anyone.
If you want to see errors, I have more than most...morally, ethically and spiritually grammatically, linguistically, procedurally, and come to think of it, I think my birth was also a mistake (really)!
stuff like advise, allot, comeing ankle biters like dat!
(hugs)!
lol, i am personally not offended. like i said, i don't make an effort when participating in these threads, but i have gotten lazy and forgetful outside of allnurses world as well. I have the sense to use spell and grammar check when I think it matters, but once upon a time, I was proper without the effort, and that gift has left me.
I once worked with a nurse whose written documentation was embarrassing. She spelled almost everything phonetically ("seazur", "eskalated" and so on) and I felt terrible for her.......until I saw her in action on the floor, and realized that her spelling and grammar had NOTHING to do with her ability as a nurse. Her compassion and competence were astounding, and to this day, I'd want her to take care of me if I ever needed it.
As anal-retentive as I am about spelling, it's hard for me not to be judgmental about those who take a more laissez-faire attitude toward it, but I'm learning.
I did not re read my post and did not use a spell check. I usually spell advice and not advise etc, but tend to be very lax on blogs since I am not at work or being graded.
I can assure you that I would not have obtained a degree if I typed my term papers and reports or P&L reports in the same style that I blog.
Not to mention there is no way to correct spelling errors which I noticed after I hit post.
Yikes, maybe I am better off working with the techies, they are more forgiving.
CASTLEGATES
424 Posts
I've noticed some new professionals with an apparent lack of basic grade-school grammar and spelling skills; have you? This trend is concerning given the respect and perception of intelligence any particular profession retains. :redbeathe Permanent records with misspells, resumes with misspells and grammar errors seem to be on the rise (not to mention our spoken language). :imbar Please disregard our last president, though...maybe it all started then?
I'm not sure if it's a lack of education at the grade school level but my 9 year old son was pointing out spelling errors on this site (my 9 year old)!
Has anyone else seen this trend?
I'm not meaning to offend anyone; with such a tight market, these errors would get a resume discarded/a letter of intent for a nursing school rejected for an Eng 099 class.
What do you think?