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The impotence of good English: it鈥檚 a piratical issue

Imperial scholar finds that in terms of spelling and grammar, foreign students know best. Rebecca Attwood reports

Published on
October 4, 2009
Last updated
May 11, 2015

A geneticist who evaluated his students鈥 English standards found that overseas undergraduates outperformed their British counterparts.

Bernard Lamb, emeritus reader in genetics at Imperial College London, and president of the Queen鈥檚 English Society, compared the work of 28 students 鈥 18 Britons and ten from overseas 鈥 in the final year of his course in applied genetics. He found that the British contingent made three times as many grammatical and spelling errors.

On average, in three pieces of work counting heavily towards their final marks, domestic students made 52 mistakes. One made 106. Errors included muddling up words, plus grammar, punctuation and spelling blunders. The average overseas student made 19 errors.

Among the words that students confused were: 鈥渋mportance鈥 and 鈥渋mpotence鈥; 鈥渧ile鈥 and 鈥減hial鈥; 鈥渋nfected鈥 and 鈥渁ffected鈥; 鈥渂are鈥 and 鈥渂ear鈥; and 鈥減iratical鈥 and 鈥減ractical鈥.

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Spelling errors included 鈥渁ddative鈥, 鈥渁moungst鈥 and 鈥減harmosutical鈥.

Dr Lamb said all the students had impressive academic records and none was registered as dyslexic.

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In an article for the Queen鈥檚 English Society鈥檚 journal, Quest, he writes: 鈥淢any of our schools do a poor job of motivating their pupils to take English standards seriously, and are not teaching basic topics such as grammar, spelling and punctuation effectively.

鈥淎bove all, they are not correcting errors, so how are pupils to know what is right and what is wrong? I know that correction takes time, but if all teachers did it, the burden on each individual would be much reduced.

鈥淥ne of my final-year home students told me that I was the only lecturer ever to have corrected her English, and that she was grateful for it, unlike some others.鈥

Dr Lamb added that students needed 鈥渃onstructive criticism and correction from primary school onwards鈥 to raise standards.

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鈥淲e need to tell the country that good English matters,鈥 he said.

rebecca.attwood@tsleducation.com

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