READING BY ANJALI PATTANAYAK
THERE IS ONE CORRECT WAY OF WRITING AND SPEAKING
Anjali Pattanayak
People consistently lament that kids today can’t speak properly or that people coming to this country need to learn to write correctly. These lamentations are based on the notion that there is a single correct way of speaking and writing. Currently, the general sentiment is that people should just learn to speak and write proper English. This understanding of writing is rooted called current traditional rhetoric, which focuses on a prescriptive and formulaic way of teaching writing that assumes there is only one way to write (or speak) something for it to be correct. However, over the past several decades, scholars in writing studies have examined the ways in which writing has a close dialectical relationship with identity, style genre, and culture. In other words, the rules for writing shift with the people and the community involved as well as the purpose and type of writing.
Most people implicitly understand that the way they communicate changes with diferent groups of people, from bosses to work colleagues to peers to relatives. They understand that conversations that may be appropriate over a private dinner may not be appropriate at the workplace. These conversational shifts might be subtle, but they are distinct. While most people accept and understand these nuances exist and will adapt to these unspoken rules— and while we have all committed a social faux pas when we didn’t understand these unspoken rules—we do not often aford this same beneft of the doubt to people who are new to our communities or who are learning our unspoken rules.
While the idea of arguing whether there is one correct way of
communicating or whether writing is culturally situated might
seem to be a pedantic exercise, the reality is that espousing the
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ideology that there is one correct way to speak and write disenfranchises many populations who are already denigrated by society. The
writing most valued in this binary is a type of writing that is situated in middle-class white culture. In adhering to so-called correct
language, we are devaluing the non-standard dialects, cultures, and
therefore identities of people and their communicative situations
that do not ft a highly limited mold.
The way in which correctness in language devalues people is
already troubling, but it becomes exacerbated by the current trends
in education. Please refer to the literary crisis chapter to learn more
about the changing dynamics in education. Given this shift and
the way that Standard Written English is deeply rooted in white
upper/middle-class culture, we see more and more students from
diverse backgrounds gaining access to college who are facing barriers due to their linguistic backgrounds.
This means that while minority students and lower class
students are ostensibly being given greater access to education,
careers, and other facets of society they had been previously
barred from, they are still facing serious barriers that their upperclass white counterparts do not, particularly in terms of culture,
language, and literacy. J. Elspeth Stuckey argues that literacy,
rather than enfranchising students, is a means of oppression and
that it does little to help the economic futures of minority students
because of how literacy teaches a particular set of values—ways of
communicating and identity. In the context of educational settings,
the cultures and identities of academia are valued more than those
of the students, which sends the message that how they, their
family, and members in their community speak and act are wrong
by comparison. In essence, it sends the message starting at a very
young age that who they are and where they come from is somehow lesser.
In this sense, education, while well intentioned, serves to
further the marginalization of certain identities and cultures that
do not ft. This is particularly evident in Latino, African American,
and English as Second Language communities. In the book Paying
for the Party, Elizabeth Armstrong and Laura Hamilton note that
colleges like the school they studied for fve years, which they
call Midwestern University, do not help facilitate social mobility.
Frequently, the students who entered college best prepared were
those who were already middle or upper class, meaning the opportunities the working- and lower-class students received were more
limited. When you look at this alongside what Gloria Ladson-Billings
84 Bad Ideas
calls the educational debt, or the compounded impact of educational
defcits that grow across generations of poor minority students,
literacy eforts as they are currently framed paint a bleak picture for
poor, minority students.
The issue is not just one of unequal access to opportunities.
Jacqueline Jones Royster and Carmen Kynard illustrate how attitudes toward students as writers are interwoven with attitudes
toward them as people. Language cannot be disassociated from
people, which has important consequences for those who grow up
speaking diferent dialects. By continuing to propagate the notion
of correct and incorrect ways of speaking, we efectively devalue the
intelligence and character of students, employees, and colleagues,
who, for whatever reasons, don’t speak or write what in historical
terms has been called the King’s English (among other names).
We use the perception of improper communication as evidence
of others’ lesser character or ability, despite recognizing that this
country was united (if only in name) after declaring independence
from that King.
This perception becomes all the more problematic because it
is not just about devaluing individuals, but about the widespread
practice of devaluing the literate practices of those who are already
marginalized. David Gold highlights the marginalization of women,
working class, rural, and African American literacy in our understanding of writing. Gold writes about how the literacy practices of
African Americans in universities laid the groundwork for the Civil
Rights movement. Indeed, the schools he studied were decades
ahead of the larger national conversation on how literacy, identity,
and power were interrelated. In her work examining how literacy
and identity formation were key for African American women and
for social change, Jacqueline Jones Royster discusses the importance of understanding the these cultural, identity, and social movements, echoing the impact marginalized scholars had in academia.
Both demonstrate the detrimental impact of sidelining groups of
people and their literate practices by devaluing their languages and
their experiences, not just for those who are marginalized but for
our larger understanding of how we as a society write.
The notion of one correct way of writing is also troubling
because it operates under the assumption that linguistic diferences are the result of error. The reality is that, for many speakers, what we might perceive as a mistake is actually a system of
diference. One notable example of a diferent dialect of English
is Ebonics, which has diferent patterns of speech rooted in the
About Who Good Writers Are 85
ancestral heritage of its speakers. Similarly, immigrant groups
will frequently speak and write English in a way that mirrors the
linguistic heritage of their mother tongue.
The way that we conceptualize language is not just detrimental to minorities; it also devalues the identities that working- and
lower-class people bring to communicative situations, including
the classroom. Lynn Z. Bloom writes that “Freshman Composition
is an unabashedly middle-class enterprise.” She argues that one
of the reasons composition is required for all students is because
it promulgates middle-class values and ways of thinking. These
values in the writing classroom are embodied in everything from
the notion of property, which undergirds the way that plagiarism
and intellectual property are treated, to formality of language and
rhetorical choices that are encouraged in papers. Indeed, the way
many instructors teach writing, plagiarism, citation, and word
choice in papers is not in and of itself good but rather is the socially
accepted way of interacting with text as defned by the middle class.
Mike Rose and Irvin Peckham write about the tension of middleclass values on working-class students and the cognitive dissonance
and struggles with identity that come with imposing such values in
writing under the guise of correctness. The idea that there is one
correct way of writing devalues the writing, thoughts, intelligence,
and identities of people from lower-class backgrounds.
Pragmatically, many argue that standard English should be
dominant in the binary between academic English and all other
dialects in order for speakers and writers to communicate with
credibility in their communities. This argument has been used to
justify the continued attention to correctness at the expense of
authors’ voices, but we can teach people to adapt while also valuing their identities. We can talk about writing as something that
they can employ to their beneft rather than a hegemonic standard
that supersedes their backgrounds, identities, and experiences.
In order to value the diversity of communication and identities
that exist in the U.S., we need to start teaching and envisioning
writing as a cultural and social activity. We need a more nuanced
view of writing in society that encourages everyone to adapt to
their audiences and contexts rather than placing an undue burden
on those who do not ft the mold of standard English. One strategy
for teaching academic English without devaluing a writer’s identity
is code-switching, a concept already taught in schools with significant minority populations as a way of empowering young people.
While instruction in code-switching is valuable because it teaches
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students that they can adopt diferent linguistic choices to appeal
to diferent audiences, it is deeply problematic that the impetus
is still placed on minority students with non-standard dialects to
adapt. While code-switching is meant to empower people, it is still
rooted in the mentality that there is one correct way of writing,
because even as code-switching teaches an incredibly nuanced way
of thinking about writing, it is still being taught in the context of
preparing writers to deal with a society that will use errors in speaking as evidence that they are lesser. As a result, it is a less-thanideal solution because it plays into—rather than undermines—the
racism of academic English.
By perpetuating the myth of one correct way of writing, we
are efectively marginalizing substantial swaths of the population linguistically and culturally. The frst step in combating this
is as easy as recognizing how correctness reinforces inequality
and afects our own perceptions of people and questioning our
assumptions about communication, and a second step is valuing
code-switching in a wide swath of communicative situations.
Further Reading
While the notion of what constitutes academic English has
remained relatively static in popular culture, the reality of writing in the university has broadened to include many other types
of writing. Patricia Bizzell, Helen Fox, and Christopher Shroeder
compile arguments for addressing these other types of communication in Alt Dis: Alternative Discourses and the Academy. In College
Writing and Beyond, Anne Beaufort provides a framework in which
to understand how writing is dynamic. In her article “Freshman
Composition as a Middle-Class Enterprise,” Lynn Z. Bloom articulates the ways in which the cultural values of the middle class are
being taught in the writing classroom as objectively good or true
and the impact of this mentality. Additionally, Asao Inoue compiles
a collection of articles in Race and Writing Assessment that provides
frameworks for considering race in assessment practices.
In 1974, the Conference for College Composition and
Communication passed the resolution Students’ Right to Their Own
Language. In this time since it passed, there has been a great deal
of discussion around the wisdom of that resolution. Editors Austin
Jackson, David E. Kirkland, and Staci Perryman-Clark compile
short articles for and against the resolution called “Students’ Right
to Their Own Language.” Bruce Horner, Min-Zhan Lu, Jacqueline Jones Royster, and
John Trimbur write about how the increasing number of English
speakers in the world is increasing linguistic diversity in “Opinion:
Language Diference in Writing: Toward a Translingual Approach.”
Additionally, Irvin Peckham writes extensively with a focus on
working class students in the classroom and the impact of college
and academic writing as a middle-class enterprise in “The Stories
We Tell.” For more on the history and cultural development of
African American Vernacular English, consider Beyond Ebonics:
Linguistic Pride and Racial Prejudice by John Baugh.
Keywords
African American Vernacular, cultural rhetorics, Ebonics, non-standard dialect, rhetorical genre studies, writing and class
Author Bio
Anjali Pattanayak is the Academic Enrichment program coordinator for the Ofce of Multicultural Student Afairs at the
University of Wisconsin–Platteville. She currently runs programs
that help underrepresented students transition into their frst year
of college to support retention and matriculation. She has spent
over fve years doing outreach work with under-represented youth
as they transition to college. She has taught both frst-year composition and frst-year experience classes. You can follow her @
lalaithfeanaro or @arpattanayak.
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