Actually, this would have been class two weeks ago; it seems like a million years have passed, for some reason... I think I share the same feelings as many of my classmates about getting frustrated with the tree diagram exercise – it was just very difficult to manipulate the mouse to diagram the sentences. I tried to help out and ended up erasing what my group mates had contributed. Anyway, I hopefully redeemed myself by figuring out how to diagram via word and posting it for my group. Incidentally, the woman who was voted Minnesota teacher of the year in 2008 has her English students diagram sentences. She believes that it leads to a better understanding of grammar and to better writing. It seems that the trend is moving back towards more explicit grammar instruction. Many people disagree with this, but it’s not necessarily an entirely bad idea. Many college freshmen that I work with express frustration that they were never taught these things in high school.
Freeman & Freeman - Chapter 7:
Chapter 7 focuses upon how words are formed, word classification, and how words enter a language.
Morphemes are the smallest unit of meaning. ‘Cat’ is an example; when the inflectional morpheme ‘s’ is added, the word becomes ‘cats’ – ‘s’ cannot stand on its own, therefore it is a bound morpheme. Words can also consist of 2 free morphemes to become compounds such as ‘ catnip’. English has 8 inflectional morphemes, while other languages are polysynthetic, meaning they have many more inflections than English.
Traditionally, English words were classified as nouns, verbs adjectives, etc., Freeman & Freeman point out that memorizing parts of speech doesn’t seem to help students. I was confused about this point because explain the difference of how an adverb or an adjective functions, does seem to help some of the students whom I have worked with. However, they point out that current approaches seem to focus more upon ‘morphological evidence,’ or patterns when teaching morphology, and that the more current explanation may be more thorough. Additionally, new terms to describe words have been developed (intensifier, determiner). Frankly, having been taught more traditionally, I find the shift in terminology a little confusing because the article/noun/verb thing is so deeply embedded in my brain that it’s hard to re-conceptualize parts of language.
I always enjoy discussions related to word etymologies, so I enjoyed the section about how words enter a language. It is also fun to observe how language evolves as new ideas come into language. For example ‘google ‘ is now a verb, but my spell-check still catches it. I wonder when this will stop? Words enter language because they are ‘coined’, or colloquialisms become acceptable (I.E.: metrosexual – which my spell check highlights), or they are borrowed. ‘Taboo’ came into the language in 1770, ‘amuck’ in 1510, and ‘bagel’ not until 1930. ‘Metrosexual’ was admitted to Webster’s dictionary in 1994, but my spell-check hasn’t caught up!
Chapter 7 focuses upon how words are formed, word classification, and how words enter a language.
Morphemes are the smallest unit of meaning. ‘Cat’ is an example; when the inflectional morpheme ‘s’ is added, the word becomes ‘cats’ – ‘s’ cannot stand on its own, therefore it is a bound morpheme. Words can also consist of 2 free morphemes to become compounds such as ‘ catnip’. English has 8 inflectional morphemes, while other languages are polysynthetic, meaning they have many more inflections than English.
Traditionally, English words were classified as nouns, verbs adjectives, etc., Freeman & Freeman point out that memorizing parts of speech doesn’t seem to help students. I was confused about this point because explain the difference of how an adverb or an adjective functions, does seem to help some of the students whom I have worked with. However, they point out that current approaches seem to focus more upon ‘morphological evidence,’ or patterns when teaching morphology, and that the more current explanation may be more thorough. Additionally, new terms to describe words have been developed (intensifier, determiner). Frankly, having been taught more traditionally, I find the shift in terminology a little confusing because the article/noun/verb thing is so deeply embedded in my brain that it’s hard to re-conceptualize parts of language.
I always enjoy discussions related to word etymologies, so I enjoyed the section about how words enter a language. It is also fun to observe how language evolves as new ideas come into language. For example ‘google ‘ is now a verb, but my spell-check still catches it. I wonder when this will stop? Words enter language because they are ‘coined’, or colloquialisms become acceptable (I.E.: metrosexual – which my spell check highlights), or they are borrowed. ‘Taboo’ came into the language in 1770, ‘amuck’ in 1510, and ‘bagel’ not until 1930. ‘Metrosexual’ was admitted to Webster’s dictionary in 1994, but my spell-check hasn’t caught up!