ThoughCo. By
Updated August 02, 2019
Grammar has long been a subject of study—as a
companion to rhetoric in ancient Greece and Rome and as one of the
seven liberal arts in medieval education. Although
the methods of studying grammar have changed dramatically in recent
times, the reasons for studying grammar
have remained essentially the same.
One of the most sensible answers to the question of
why grammar matters appears in a position statement on the teaching of grammar
in American schools. Published by the National Council of Teachers of English
(NCTE), the report is refreshingly free of educational cant. Here's how it
begins:
"Grammar is important because it is the
language that makes it possible for us to talk about language. Grammar names
the types of words and word groups that make up sentences not only in English
but in any language. As human beings, we can put sentences together even as
children—we can all do grammar. But to be able to talk about how sentences are
built, about the types of words and word groups that make up sentences—that is
knowing about grammar. And knowing about grammar offers a window into the human
mind and into our amazingly complex mental capacity."
"People associate grammar with errors and
correctness. But knowing about grammar also helps us understand what makes
sentences and paragraphs clear and interesting and precise. Grammar can be part
of literature discussions when we and our students closely read the sentences
in poetry and stories. And knowing about grammar means finding out that all
languages and all dialects follow grammatical patterns."
(Haussamen, Brock, et al. "Some Questions and
Answers About Grammar," 2002.)
Note: The full report, "Some Questions and
Answers About Grammar," can be found on the website for the National
Council of Teachers of English. It's well worth the read for anyone interested
in English grammar.
Additional
Perspectives on Grammar consider these explanations from other experts in
English and education on why grammar matters:
"On the utility and importance
of the study of Grammar, and the principles of composition, much might be advanced, for the encouragement of
persons in early life to apply themselves to this branch of learning... It may
indeed be justly asserted, that many of the differences in opinion amongst men,
with the disputes, contentions, and alienations of heart, which have too often
proceeded from such differences, have been occasioned by a want of proper skill
in the connexion and meaning of words, and by a tenacious misapplication of
language."
(Murray, Lindley. English Grammar:
Adapted to the Different Classes of Learners, Collins and Perkins, 1818.)
"We study grammar because a knowledge of sentence structure is an aid in the interpretation of
literature; because continual dealing with sentences influences the student to
form better sentences in his own composition; and because grammar is the best
subject in our course of study for the development of reasoning power."
(Webster, William Frank. The Teaching
of English Grammar, Houghton, 1905.)
"The study of language is a part of general
knowledge. We study the complex working of the human body to understand
ourselves; the same reason should attract us to studying the marvelous
complexity of human language..."
"If you understand the nature of language, you
will realize the ground for your linguistic prejudices and perhaps moderate them; you
will also more clearly assess linguistic issues of public concern, such as
worries about the state of the language or what to do about the teaching of immigrants.
Studying the English language has a more obvious practical application: It can
help you to use the language more effectively."
(Greenbaum, Sidney, and Gerald Nelson. An
Introduction to English Grammar, 2nd ed., Longman, 2002.)
"Grammar is the study of how sentences mean.
And that is why it helps. If we want to understand the meaning conveyed by sentences, and to develop our
ability to express and respond to this meaning, then the more we know about
grammar, the better we will be able to carry out these tasks..."
"Grammar is the structural foundation of our
ability to express ourselves. The more we are aware of how it works, the more
we can monitor the meaning and effectiveness of the way we and others use
language. It can help foster precision, detect ambiguity, and exploit the
richness of expression available in English. And it can help everyone — not
only teachers of English but teachers of anything, for all teaching is
ultimately a matter of getting to grips with meaning."
(Crystal, David. Making Sense of Grammar,
Longman, 2004.)
"[T]he study of your own grammatical system
can be quite revealing and useful, and provides you with insights into how
language, your own and others', whether spoken or signed, actually
works..."
"With an understanding of how language actually
works, and a concise vocabulary to talk about it, you will be equipped to
make more informed decisions and choices about grammar and usage, and to tease
out linguistic fact from linguistic fiction."
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