This is quite recent but I’ve been browsing Lemmy a bunch lately and quite often I see extreme grammatical errors.

I’m not talking about like, incorrect stylistic choices between commas and dashes, or an improper use of ellipses or missing commas or incorrect use of apostrophes in its/it’s or in multiple posessive articles or just plain typos or any nitpicky grammar nazi shit like that, but just basic spelling specifically.

It’s one thing when you can’t spell some pretty uncommon words and you’re too lazy to look it up and/or use autocorrect, but it’s a completely different league to misspell very basic words, very recently I saw someone spell “extreme” as “extream” which is just kind of baffling, I actually can’t even imagine how one would make such a mistake?

And it’s not been an isolated thing either, I’ve seen several instances like that lately.

Am I going crazy? Is it just me?

  • @LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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    2 days ago

    Phonics is dogshit and it’s being phased out in favour of whole word reading here.

    You should not learn spelling by “sounding out” much of anything, you should learn it through reading text and remembering how words are spelt.

    • partial_accumen
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      92 days ago

      You might want to look at the latest research. Its not favorable after decades of data from “whole word” reading techniques education.

      you should learn it through reading text and remembering how words are spelled.

      Thats the concept of “whole word”, yes, but in practice it severely limits vocabulary and comprehension apparently. That real world data tells the tale.

      • @LainTrain@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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        12 days ago

        I’ll have a look, but idk I was taught whole word in two languages and I can write a lot better than I can speak in at least 1.3 of them.

        • partial_accumen
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          32 days ago

          Did you downvote me because I pointed out the latest research doesn’t agree with your position?

            • partial_accumen
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              32 days ago

              My apologies. The downvote was on my post in under 15 seconds after I posted it. I had assumed the only one that would see it would be the person alerted to it. I guess Lemmy is growing up there are downvoters waiting to pounce instantly! We’re graduating to the big leagues now!

    • @XeroxCool@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      At average apparent text sizes, you only see ~4 letters clearly at a time, so it’s often enough that you can’t read a whole word at once. From there, there’s so many prefixes, suffixes, conjugations, compounds, and portmanteaus that it doesn’t make sense to just try to memorize the dictionary. What happens when you’re reading a flamboyant author that has tons of theasaraus usage and you come across words you’ve never heard in your life? You use context as best you can, but if there’s familiar roots in the word, you have a better chance of understanding it.

      Also

      spelt

      That is a grain spelled “spelt”