Should students be encouraged to ask questions about the origin of English and how English developed its spelling and literary formats?

As an Educational Consultant who has presented in hundreds of schools across the United States, I have observed over and over that  students who ask "why English is spelled the way it is" or 'why English grammar is different from Spanish or Chinese or Urdu or any other language, are almost always given the response that "English is a crazy language!", followed by  further admonishment by the teacher who tells the student(s) "sit down" and  to" just do what the textbook. tells them.  

Why does the student who has observed that the definition of noun as a "person, place, or thing" includes nouns such as "algebra", "beauty", "charm" "development", "experience" are all nouns and not

things insist that "in grammar they are thing"-- really?

Why does the student who uses the word "ain't" is told that it is "wrong" and should stop using it, yet never told the historic and social reasons for the ubiquitous word in the English language and if we go to operas, we can  hear it beautifully used in George Gershwin's song "It Ain't Necessarily So"?

Why do some teachers ridicule the student who asks why is "proper" noun PROPER and what makes a "common" noun COMMON?

I raise these questions as examples of the squelching of knowledge that pervades many of our classrooms, mainly for two reasons: 1)  Our textbooks are the absolute and final authority 2) students who ask deep questions interrupt what the teacher has been told to teach  3) the testing companies determine what students need to know and demean expansion of knowledge. 

Would love a discussion because ridiculing the students who want to "know more and go beyond" keeps all students fearful of asking questions and learning what lies outside the "testing ropes."

 

  in so many classrroms.

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My students ask these questions all the time:  in Latin class.  I explain as well as I can.  I'm not a linguist, but I do understand the development of language, and where English came from.  Students are fascinated by the origins of English.  I have no idea why there are so many different pronunciations of "ough", but I can teach them that the derivation of each of those words-through, enough, bough, cough-is most likely not Latin or Greek, since those words are monosyllabic.  My students don't demand a full-fledged-expert answer.  They just want to know what I think about it.  I usually know more than they do, and they are pretty satisfied.  They instinctively know that talking "about" a language is not the same as speaking that language.  Yet they are interested in the workings of language.  I have been teaching them about English for as long as I have been trying to teach them to read Latin.  It makes me sad that you know teachers who do not encourage questions.  In my classroom, questions are golden.  Mistakes are, too.  You can't own the information if you can't ask a question about it.  Sometimes mistakes are necessary to advancement.  No, make that often.  Often you must make a "smart mistake" in order to progress in your mastery.  Getting frustrated when students make mistakes is completely understandable if they keep making the same mistake over and over.  But that just tells me that I have not taught that particular concept well enough for them.  Learning is complicated.  Teaching.takes.skill.

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