Texting in the Millennial Generation

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Date Submitted: 10/06/2015 06:48 PM

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Texting in the millennial generation

Text messaging has had a positive impact on our English language and has improved spelling and grammar for the millennial generation. This culture has appointed them inheritors of their own language (Delgado, 2014) and has prompted leaders to align themselves with the organization's vision (Kreitner & Kinicki, 2013/2014) as some educators believe that texting should be incorporated in classroom instruction. Today's college students are a part of the millennials which are also known as "the texting generation" who were born between 1982 and 2002 (NIU, 2015). They are considered the most diverse and their uniqueness and defining characteristics have been shaped by technology (Gladfelter and Friedman, 2014). Communication has become more electronic in form and experts say that children write more in this generation than they did 20 years ago because of texting and social media and most of that writing is text-speak, which is a SMS language commonly known in mobile text messaging (Merrit, 2013). A study found that texting may improve children's spelling and grammar because of using abbreviation such as 'gr8' in short for 'great', makes students think about language phonetically (Carter, 2014). According to author Judith Burns, believed that from a study shows that the most creative texters were among the best spellers (Burns, 2014). Research done with the Journal of Computer Assisted Learning discovered that the association between spelling and text messaging may be explained by a "highly phonetic nature" of the abbreviation that children used and the alphabetic awareness required to decode words (Paton, 2011). However, criticisms have surfaced against millennials. They are accused of failing to form mature language skills and the ability to express complete emotions, thanks to cell phones. Experts believe that this form of language is a bad habit which causes individuals to forget proper language rules (Merritt, 2013). This...