Texting a social barrier for children struggling with literacy skills

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Texting could be creating a literacy issue for children, but it is not the problem most people would expect.

In a presentation to Education Transforms 2017 in Hobart today, written language expert Dr Nenagh Kemp said her research with colleagues in the UK into digital communication had revealed some surprising results.

“It is a bit of a paradox because for children who are already good at reading and writing it [texting] seems to help them get even better, because they get to practice reading and writing more, and more creatively, and for kids that otherwise wouldn’t be reading and writing a lot, it can help them too,” she said.

“But for those who already find reading and writing a challenge, having to deal with a new set of written language patterns, however unconventional, can bring the stress of school-based literacy activities to social interactions as well.”

Dr Kemp, Senior Lecturer in Psychology at the University of Tasmania, said the writing style of digital communication can also have a social meaning. Many messages are written in ‘textese’, which was initially driven by small screens, character limits, the alphanumeric keyboard and the need to save time and effort. But this initial fad for abbreviating and ‘having fun with language’ has morphed into a social statement.

“Being competent at composing digital messages can make the writer look cool or clever. Getting the writing style not quite right can encourage others to form negative opinions of the writer,” she said.

“They might be excluded from a quick-fire, fun conversation. They might not get invited into these social worlds of digital communication because they can’t respond as rapidly and they can’t be as witty as others.

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“It would be like being in a foreign country where you can’t join in as much because you are not as fluent in the language as other people.”

Dr Kemp said children who found reading and writing a challenge were also dealing with the confusion created by switching between textese and formal writing styles.

“Maybe it is more difficult for them to separate when to write formally and when to write informally, and teachers and many adults might be judgmental that the way they write represents the way they think,” she said.

“Sometimes the message is there, but it is informal and it is easy to think they are not as clever as their classmates.”

In general terms, Dr Kemp said her research into digital communications had not revealed the results she was expecting.

“Going into this I was almost indignant about the exposure of children to this kind of writing and I expected it would be what everyone feared – that it would ruin your reading and writing ability, but I have been convinced by the evidence across numerous worldwide studies that it is actually having a positive impact,” she said.

However, Dr Kemp warned that the research results could change as quickly as communication technology. “Now our phones do everything for us. They spell our words, put in capitals and full stops. The ‘errors’ people make now are not really creative ones, they are attributable to laziness,” she said.

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Dr Kemp said there may also be some fallout from the trend towards children receiving phones a lot earlier in life, before they have a lot of intact reading and spelling ability.

“In the past they were adapting for the new technology, now children are being introduced to digital communication and messaging almost at the same time they are learning formal reading and spelling,” she said. “They are going to need to learn which is which and how to keep them separate otherwise they will have difficulties later on.”

(Source: University of Tasmania)

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Date Created: July 23, 2017 Date Modified: July 31, 2017