A Stiff Sentence

Posted on Jun 25, 2012 | 3 Comments

Are you and me learning proper grammar anymore?

According to Sue Shellenbarger of The Wall Street Journal, chances are that, no, we’re not. “Managers are fighting an epidemic of grammar gaffes in the workplace,” she wrote recently, and this “can create bad impressions with clients, ruin marketing materials and cause communications errors.”

At the same time, Shellenbarger noted, some companies just don’t care. Jason Grimes, vice president of product marketing at RescueTime, told her that getting your point across honestly is more important than getting it across with polish. “Those who can be sincere, and still text and Twitter and communicate on Facebook—those are the ones who are going to succeed,” Grimes said.

These two contrasting views of the importance (or non-importance) of grammar go back thousands of years. In A Functioning SocietyPeter Drucker pointed out that Socrates believed that “the only function of knowledge is self-knowledge, that is, the intellectual, moral and spiritual growth of the person,” while Protagoras, an opponent, held that “knowledge meant logic, grammar and rhetoric.” The core of what for centuries was considered a “liberal education” was based primarily on the latter.

“They’re hanging their jackets there.” Image source: Echo-Lit

As a writer, Drucker valued clarity of thought and expression, and he certainly abided by the rules of good grammar and syntax. But his view of their importance was idiosyncratic. He considered a “general education” to be essential, but, he asked, what is “general” and what is “specialized”?

There is nothing more specialized . . . than Anglo-Saxon grammar,” Drucker pointed out in The Landmarks of Tomorrow. “Electronic circuitry, however, is a most general subject integrating a good deal of physics, technology, mathematics, logic, theory of perception and information theory. Yet the first would usually be classified as general education, the other as specialized or technical training.”

Ultimately, Drucker considered it natural that grammar was becoming less of a focus in school, something he observed already in a 1957 article for Harper’s Magazine. “Despite the anguished pleas of teachers and parents, we talk less and less about ‘grammar’—the study of parts of speech—and more and more about ‘communication,’” he wrote. “It is the whole of speech, including not only the words left unsaid but the atmosphere in which words are said and heard, that ‘communicates.’”

What do you think: How much does—or should—grammar matter in the workplace of today and tomorrow?

3 Comments

  1. Annie
    June 26, 2012

    Last week, I heard a similar discussion on NPR. Part of the conversation centered on knowing your audience and writing with an appropriate level of formality. It would be obviously be inappropriate to use “text-speak” in a formal office memo. Beyond that, my opinion is that proper grammar is important especially if the goal to to have clarity in communication. Improperly placed commas and ambiguous pronoun references lead to confusion. It seems unprofessional to send something that has not been proofread. At the same, time, I can tolerate an “irregardless” here or a mis-spelled word there–but, it would be hard for the inner writer/English teacher in me to not judge a person for their carelessness/ignorance of correct grammar and punctuation. Now, that I’ve written this, I’m sure I have made an error or two in this paragraph and everyone will be judging me. It’s the law of karma. I guess I deserve it.

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  2. Greg Zerovnik
    June 30, 2012

    I chair the online MBA program for Touro University Worldwide and developed a course for the program called “Professional Communications.” It includes practice writing traditional reports/papers, as well as business letters, tweets, and blog posts.We also cover elements of APA style, with an emphasis on doing good secondary research with proper citations and reference listings. I’ve now taught the class five times, and it’s clear that it makes a positive difference for students who take it.

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  3. judy zamos
    July 2, 2012

    I had a chuckle when I read this. I have always prided myself on having a better than average command of correct grammar, but my mind leapt back in time to a paper I wrote for Peter Drucker. It was a lengthy paper and I thought I had done a good job, so I looked forward to his remarks. To my dismay, there was only one comment. I had accidentally used “re” in discussing a topic, and in the margin in all caps he wrote “THIS IS NOT A MEMO!”

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