Connecting Thoroughness to the Language Arts Curriculum

Proofreading

The Importance of Proofreading: In his State of the Union address on December 5th of 1870, President Ulysses S Grant mentioned a tariff adjustment that would put a duty on certain imports and bring more luxurious items-such as tropical fruits-to the United States, and that the revenue from these taxes would help increase the country’s wealth. Unfortunately, this tariff was miswritten: a phrase in the tariff excluding items from the tariff was supposed to read “Tropical fruit-plants for the purposes of propagation,”, but which, due to a punctuation error instead read “Tropical fruit, plants for propagation”, causing the Unites States to lose an estimated $1 million in tax revenue on tropical fruit. It was rewritten a few years later and the error was corrected.
There are many stories out there about how one small punctuation mark has made a lot of difference in a message, and how disastrous things have happened, much like the story above. Proofreading is not just important when it comes to English, though. Thoroughness in proofreading math problems or a paper written for science or social studies class can make a difference. Even thoroughness in reading an assignment can improve understanding and make completing an assignment easier. 

Previous
Previous

Connecting Compassion to the Science Curriculum

Next
Next

Connecting Orderliness to the English Curriculum