Practical Exercises in English
Practical Exercises in English
Practical Exercises in English by Huber Gray Buehler
Hard Press | 2006 | ISBN: 1406908029 | 186 pages | PDF | 12 MB
Arranged For Use With Adams Sherman Hill锟絪 Foundations Of Rhetoric.
From the preface:
The art of using one's native tongue correctly and forcibly is acquired for the most part through imitation and practice, and is not so much a matter of knowledge as of habit. As regards English, then, the first duty of our schools is to set before pupils excellent models, and, in all departments of school-work, to keep a watchful eye on the innumerable acts of expression, oral and written, which go to form habit. Since, however, pupils come to school with many of their habits of expression already formed on bad models, our schools must give some attention to the special work of pointing out common errors of speech, and of leading pupils to convert knowledge of these errors into new and correct habits of expression.
This is the branch of English teaching in which this little book hopes to be useful.
All the "Exercises in English" with which I am acquainted consist chiefly of
"sentences to be corrected." To such exercises there are grave objections. If, on
the one hand, the fault in the given sentence is not seen at a glance, the pupil is
likely, as experience has shown, to pass it by and to change something that is not
wrong. If, on the other hand, the fault is obvious, the exercise has no value in the
formation of habit. Take, for example, two "sentences for correction" which I
select at random from one of the most widely used books of its class: "I knew it
was him," and "Sit the plates on the table." A pupil of any wit will at once see that
the mistakes must be in "him" and "sit," and knowing that the alternatives are
"he" and "set," he will at once correct the sentences without knowing, perhaps,
why one form is wrong, the other right. He has not gained anything valuable; he
has simply "slid" through his exercise. Moreover, such "sentences for correction"
violate a fundamental principle of teaching English by setting before the
impressionable minds of pupils bad models. Finally, such exercises are unnatural,
because the habit which we hope to form in our pupils is not the habit of
correcting mistakes, but the habit of avoiding them...