Sinned wrote:The Primary School I attended had superb teachers and their teaching of grammar hit a sympathetic note with me.
I was privileged to have a positively
massive head start on most youngsters by the time I entered the school system, and that's down to my family -- Dad was an English major, my grandmother had a Masters degree in biology, and my grand-dad was an MD. I got taught very early on how to wield the language, in both its spoken and written forms by the most powerful means available -- by
example (and the occasional cold stare when I got something wrong). My mother (whom I never got to know) was, by training, a mathematician although she was denied a degree in it because of her sex (this, recall, was in 1961); instead of a Bachelor's degree in mathematics she instead took a degree in her minor subject, German, which was a cakewalk as she was fluent in it when she got to college. (None, or at least very little, of my mother's numeracy managed to get into me, and I never developed much of a liking for biology, but always adored computers. Go figure.)
A dirty little secret I'll let the forum in on is that I view the written and spoken languages so differently that I write using UK ("The Queen's") English whereas I converse in very unremarkable "Network American". Uncle Al is the only active member on the forum now that's heard me speak (Bob, now Elizabeth, being the other), and, while my speaking style is rather different from my writing style, it's usually apparent who's behind the curtain. However, as in my writing style, I very seldom feel the need to utter expletives in order to drive a point home when speaking.
The folks who raised me are now long gone, but I try to do their memory an honour by keeping my language skills sharp. It's the least I can do to return the amazing gift they gave me so very long ago.
On another note, and to touch on one of "Sinned's" (great play that moniker is!) notion is that perhaps the most important skill that needs to be taught early on is
how to find things. The ability to find answers, hints, or techniques is frequently vastly more important than having it in one's brain. There is
never any shame whatsoever in saying, "I don't know" as if one knows how to look for "it" one can follow the "I don't know" with a hearty, "Let's go find out!"