anotherhiggins,
I applaud this effort.
So am I. But how long will it be until it is a requirement in all states? I don't hold my breath. And how long will it stay around until another idiot again will say that no one needs the grammar?
Lunatic,
I wasn't looking to start a debate on the issue, the problem I have is that different people want it different ways.
I understand. Just wanted to point it out.
Especially when I have professors in two different courses telling me I needed to include/remove it.
Well, while you are in school, you might as well do what each of the professors want you to do (even though you may once in a while mention that you didn't make a mistake, you just applied what you were previously taught).
When you are not in school any more, you may as well form an opinion of your own on all contradictory grammar/punctuation topics (not on those that set in stone), like Oxford comma, placing punctuation logically vs. only inside the quotation marks, passive voice, splitting infinitives, hanging prepositions, and so on. Find an article or two from a generally trusted source, to use as proofs of your opinion where required, and keep it close. That's what I do.
The point here is centered on what is the point of teaching proper grammar when you speak like a California valley girl?
Well, proper grammar and teenage speak are different animals. It's hard to change the way you speak, especially if you are hanging out among other teenagers, and speak this way for long enough. Unlike writing, where you can stop and a review what you've just written, in the oral speech you cannot that easily avoid an annoying word that just jumps out of your mouth without you even realizing - and you cannot cross it out once you said it. To correct the speech, knowing grammar may often be not enough. After all, Professor Higgins not only taught Eliza Doolittle grammar, he worked very hard on her speech. Many of those kids will speak better with time, when they change the setting, friends, etc. Some won't.
It, like, seems, like, kind of, like, similar to, like, wearing, like, clean underwear, like, on your way to, like, being, like, executed.
I can see nothing wrong or strange with wearing clean underwear on your way to being executed.
I have a spelling problem - not a grammar problem (though I likely have that as well).
So, you think, it is much different from knowing grammar and not being able to speak, like, properly? ;-)