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The Logic of the Legos "Spelling & Modernity"

category national | arts and media | opinion/analysis author Tuesday July 10, 2007 21:11author by ipsiphi - (iosaf = o as if = sofia = ah bollox no-one understands me anyway) Report this post to the editors

In the last while attention on this site has been brought yet again to the suicide crises & adjacent mental health issues amongst our young. We've read much & been directed to yet other sites and resources who like most of us want to do our bit to tackle the problem. There seems to be growing concensus that the nasty hard approach just isn't working. Yet we've still got some work to do in appraising what that means & how it ought influence contemporary anarchist & friends activism, conversation, chit-chat & attitude. It goes without saying the judicial, penal & educational policies and frameworks of both the Irish state & Irish society have a role to play. But lest we get diverted into learning a list of "warning signs" & "indicators" of those dealing with the various psychological or emotional challenges which may lead to suicide I thought to bring it back to primary school. S-p-e-l-l-i-n-g.

I'm left-handed and at various stages of my life have shown amidexterity and admit sometimes when the students I teach chatter too much as I write on the white board, I play a little dramatic trick.
I write with both hands at the same time. Then I reverse letters with one hand (generally my left which is dominant) whilst continuing to write normally with the right. If they haven't shut up in stunned amazement by then, I write upside down with one hand whilst writing something else with the other. Our approach to classroom management is generally based in many assumed notions built on our own childhood experience which work in tandem with training & to the greatest extent our work environment. A society which does not identify needs at an early stage of educational development is ill-fitted to deal with crises which result from alienation or marginalisation a decade later on.

I delight in mis-spelling, anyone who can write the same word backwards, forwards & upside down is naturally drawn to turning the same constructs of characters inside out & thus I suppose it is unsurprising that I also delight in crosswords. As so over the years I've passed my time with various cryptic crosswords enjoying the sensation of learning the individual style which is particular to all those who set them. It was only natural I suppose that for a while I tried to set some of my own. My favourite crossword-setter of all time died in the last year to the dismay of many who had enjoyed her puzzles of "elegant simplicity" through her launch in the 1950's to her valedictory clue in "the Guardian" of December 6 2004 ""A hollow farewell (4)" She began setting her crosswords for a newspaper which though on the left had always justifiably invited disdain in Ireland for its prejudice. Yet somehow crosswords have always maintained a distance from censorship as much as censure. I am writing about her now as this introduction to learning resources for teachers & parents alike in Ireland because before our modern age of software driven spell-checkers - hardly anyone could spell properly. Indeed most people kept dictionaries to help them with their spelling rather than to learn new words as the vogue for spelling competitions in the 20th century attests.

Indeed "The Guardian" long held the record for the most typographic mistakes in one print edition, the pinacle of achievement having been the misspelling of its own name. That wonderful error led to the long standing nickname "the Groniad". I sometimes look across the online pieces I write now & I admit I take a perhaps wicked pleasure in some of the typos that have slipped from qwerty keyboard. It indicates spontaneity at best. I think perhaps wrongly it is very difficult to fake.

I was very pleased today to see the BBC include an article on the online feature page which deals with the question of simplified spelling. The idea has been around as long as English orthography or for that matter standardisation of any language, which is in fact no that terribly long at all. It is impressive how many of the European languages which found their words squeezed into leather bound tomes and volumes by the lexicographers were in fact so badly spellt. It was the American writer Mark Twain who perhaps reflecting on the all too brief and scarce improvements made by that people on the language who proposed a phased simplification of English to render it completely phonetic. Unfortuanately the didactic clarity which ensured the old world spelling of center and theater which Twain hoped to push to its lojikal koncluzhin was to become that jargonised dictionary of into such barbarisms as "transportation for transport" (as Bill Bryson noted).

Now we have mobile phones and SMS text messages. Lest you despair, be assured I'm not seeking the three main 3r's of reader reaction on this - refine, rebuttal, resonate. I'm not entering a rant on "why can't our kids spell". I'm not a overfed and overpaid hack. I'm asking you to read the BBC feature and then consider how we identify children and treat with adults who have these "learning difficulties". We stop bullying by removing the stigma of difference which often prevents a collective response. We end the agony of two in despair (both bully and bullied) by taking away that point of contention. There are many such starting points of difference ranging from physical appearance to learning difficulties to speech impediments and phasias such as stammering, suttering and ribbiding and of course Tourets which even Mozart had fuck fnord . I'm not sure if we need think any of us normal. The genetic freakiness which allows me to write inside, outside, upside down & backwards must surely be compensated by evil fetid smelling feet or something. Thus I am against the the hard stick approach of political correctness & banning things but rather altering their context. We must all laugh @ ourselves.

There are many, some of whom are newcomers to this site who still haven't reflected on the place of the typo - or what it says as much as it what is means to laugh at oneself. to get it all wrong.

Once upon a time a delightful little lady Ruth Crisp set crosswords in a newspaper that couldn't typeset her clues properly. The results approached an almost cabalistic mysticism - for truly the clues may never be solved in their given form. But I digress into hermenuetics.

so the 3 R's of comment -
* refine (make better)
* rebutt (i disagree!)
* resonate (the same thing happened to me/my granny/my neighbour)

the links :- http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/magazine/6250184.stm
Ruth Crisp's obit http://groups.google.com.sb/group/alt.obituaries/browse...99626

resources for 2 differences & 1 indicator which needs a group non-heirarchial response, it is indeed something you can't legislate for :-

http://www.dyslexia.ie/
http://www.stammeringireland.ie/
http://www.bullyingireland.com/

author by Mainstreamerpublication date Fri Jul 13, 2007 09:31author address author phone Report this post to the editors

The FF/PD ,now FF/PD/Green emphasis has been about figures and providing fodder to
the 'knowledge economy'. The engineering sector has suffered in Ireland, the apprenticeship
sector has suffered. The removal of the Traveller Capitation grants by Her Highness
The Minister Of Education and the reduction of the Irish Language programme in Primary
schools indicates an educational policy which is 'anti' learning. It is about 'schooling' the
kid to fit into the chipped shoulder analysis of what a modern irish economy should look
like- everyone in tech or pharm.

Relentless mainstreaming of kids with learning difficulties has led to a lack of correct
resourcing in the educational psychology service where kids are identified early with:
dyslexia/dyspraxia/ADHD and the whole gamut of aspherger's syndrome (etc)
They don't want to be mainstreamed.

Most of them want to develop their faculties with computers/arts/language/aninmation/
construction. The engineering sector is starved of new apprentices and the old
anco/fas apprenticeship schemes are tailored to provide maximum money to employers
rather than recognised grades. But that is the FF way- leave the mess for someone else to
clean up. Starve the economy of craft based trade and make parents pay for the privilege
of a state education. It begins with recognising the right of the child to education that
suits them and free pre-school care.

Mary Hanafin has not:-

1. Provided an adequate number of educational psycholgists to kids in need.
2. Recognised the futility of mainstreaming kids with special needs.
3. Addressed the concerns of the National school Principals in relation to
forcing the school to raise funds.

The FF regime has abdicated in its duty of care to the child.

author by ipsipublication date Fri Jul 13, 2007 17:06author address author phone Report this post to the editors

I suggest a middle way is best. Quite honestly all kids have special needs in some sense & some model responses (for bullying at least) are on closer examination not really the best ones. I'll try and illustrate this with a true anecdote.

Yesterday at a summer camp organised by one of those international schools which have branches throughout the world where "overseas" Americans as well as rich locals send their brats, one child bit another while they were floating around in the swmming pool. They're both in the pre-school age group. Within an hour an emergency meeting of all the permanent staff was called to review the incident with the monitors & on scene medical officer and child psychologist. My girlfriend is on the staff. Neither of the kids (bitten or biter) have attained the "age of reason" or to put in other way - their world is one of tooth-fairies, santa claus & Dr Seuss. By 18h00 a report had been prepared on the aggressor [sic]. He's four years of age and not even properly enrolled (as his parents want) in this "august & reputable" school but he has the label "potential psycopath" on his "permanent record" next to his background status as "adopted Russian" with "emotional difficulties" & "social integration problems". By five past six the other kid (the bitten one) was collected by its nanny complete with walt disney plaster on its iodined cheek & brought home to its house. It fortuanately was decided it didn't need a tetanus injection. By a quarter past six its parents had been located on the Egyptian riviera and informed of the attack [sic] & a fax had been despatched to their blackberry outlining policy on "bully management" & spelling out the small print on the insurance policy. What really got my girlfriend & most of (if not all) of her colleagues was the utter injustice & hyperbole. But they see that everyday. Teaching if it does nothing else confirms the lie of "meritocracy" and drives home the truth of class oppression & inequality. If that's what life is like for kids starting out in schools young FG couples or dare I say it - Dun Laoighaire junior regatta parents wistfully envy - then maybe us lot on the "rough & tumble" side of the class divide are truly better off in some senses.
Thus I attempt to reiterate by real life example how alienation begins at a very early age & the true nature of bullying is often missed. They've labelled him a psycopath! - probably end up in the CIA like his da. sure he's a great future.

Both bully and bullied are victims. Rough & tumble, knocks & scrapes & the occassional bite are normal.

Related Link: http://www.bullyingireland.com/
author by fox in sockspublication date Fri Jul 13, 2007 17:46author address author phone Report this post to the editors

kids cannot get:-
1. a reader for state exams.
2.correction by someone who 'gets' the issue of isolation in an 'academic' environment.
3. extra time.
4. dropping a language (mostly Irish/gaeilge)

The Dept of ed sees maybe 2-5 of the estimated 50 kids p/a in need of intervention.
The budget in the dept of ed is tailored to the tailored figures.
Intervention depends on the consent of child and parent.
if the kid does not get the label- the result is that they are mainstreamed and no allowance
is made for the difficulty, but thats just working on the coal-face of experience.

The DAI has not in the ten years of FF and its varied dance partners had a minister
for education attend and address its conference.
The DAI- Dyslexic Assoc. of Ireland, therefore has to perform the expensive interventions
through its organisation by itself in order to relieve the kids from the mainstream and
get them the label so that the half hour a day of remedial is a breathing space to
learn phonics/computers or just do a bit of art.
In some cases the kid who wears the label begins to recognise the potential of it for
accepting their difference and just getting on with it- and mostly they say, its cool
enough to be so because they are getting the help they need- out of the mainstream.
If that recognition was taken one step further and admittance of different qualities
and levels of talents were acknowledged , less bullying would take place.
The 48 or so students per school, per year who are denied the right to wear the label
are suffering intensely with their difference and having to sit in exam halls with
hundreds of kids and watch the words jump around whilst a little voice in their head
tells them they're thick...(and they are not, they just use a different part of the brain
to problem solve)

 
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