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'Msg Txting' Improves Kids' Literacy: Study

by Thilaka Ravi on May 26 2008 2:26 PM

A new research that suggests text messages can improve literacy among children will probably cheer concerned parents who are worried to see their kid engrossed in texting messages.

A new research that suggests text messages can improve literacy among children will probably cheer concerned parents who are worried to see their kid engrossed in texting messages.

Professor David Crystal believes that sending frequent texts helps children's reading and writing because of the imaginative abbreviations needed.

The finding is in stark contrast to fears that texting's free forms and truncated words herald the abandonment of traditional grammar.

"People have always used abbreviations. They do not actually use that many in texts but when they do they are using them in new, playful and imaginative ways that benefit literacy," Times Online quoted Crystal, honorary professor of linguistics at the University of Wales, Bangor, as saying.

Crystal's views will appear in his new book, 'Txtng: The Gr8 Db8'.

In one study due to appear in the British Journal of Developmental Psychology, researchers asked 88 10 to 12-year-olds to compose text messages for various social scenarios.

Beverly Plester, a senior lecturer in psychology at Coventry University, and her colleagues found that using "textisms" -abbreviations such as "2nite" for "tonight" - was "positively associated with word reading, vocabulary and phonological awareness".

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Source-ANI
THK/L


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