Grammar


Understanding Written Grammar
By Jane Walpole


A guide for writers and anyone else whose activities require using the written word correctly, including business and professional people, students and their parents -- and all of us who did not get it the first time


Have you been asking yourself, "Why didn't I learn this in school?" Do you blame yourself for having been a lazy or inattentive student way back then? Don't. Chances are, you didn't learn grammar because you weren't taught grammar. You weren't taught it because your English teachers didn't know it. And they didn't know it because their education professors told them that grammar is difficult, arcane, and quite useless in learning to read and write.

The professors have a point. For the past seventy years, grammar has often been presented to students -- if it is presented -- as a bunch of unexplained and sometimes erroneous rules (difficult) with meaningless terminology (arcane), supported by deadening exercises far removed from real writing (useless). In short, if grammar has been taught at all, it's been taught poorly.


To buttress their anti-grammar position, these professors cite a dozen pieces of research that "prove" teaching grammar is a waste of time. These research studies would be hilarious, if their impact weren't so serious. Typically, one group of students is given hours of grammar drill of the difficult, arcane, and useless sort. A second "control" group spends those same hours reading literature and writing papers. After several months, both groups are tested on their writing skills. The result (surprise, surprise): the control group writes somewhat better papers than the grammar group. As it happens, several recent and carefully constructed research studies have shown even more conclusively that teaching grammar as an integral and understandable part of a composition course sparks impressive gains in writing ability. Somehow, though, these results don't always reach the education classes.


ISBN 0966512561
214 pages
$14.95


Understanding Written Grammar

is a concise survey of the essential grammar needed by anyone who writes for whatever reason -- and by anyone who must write right! It's a book designed for both the cover-to-cover reader and the person who needs quick clarification of a grammatical point.

Understanding Written Grammar carefully explores the logic of English

grammar, clearly explaining such elements as
* sentences, clauses, phrases
* subjects, predicates, modification
* punctuation
* sentence combining
* syntax and style
* and much, much more

Unlike a standard grammar handbook that merely states the rules and provides an example or two, Understanding Written Grammar seeks "to illuminate the rationale and logic of grammar" and therefore treats its subject -- written grammar -- as a reflection of the way the human mind thinks. Although it can be used as a reference book, Jane Walpole's narrative voice makes this a comfortable book to read in its entirety, especially for those who have found their previous encounters with grammar to be disquieting experiences that led to confusion rather than understanding.