« first day (29 days earlier)      last day (3504 days later) » 

22:09
Come to think of it, maybe I should be less rhetorical, and treat our learners more like kids.
When I wrote anything rhetorically, it implies that I trust their ability to solve the rest on their own. In other words, I trust that the learner already knows the answer or should be able to come to realize the answer by themselves if they think about it carefully.
Of course, this doesn't work for everyone.
But I noticed that it works less and less on ELL.
It seems like tell-all answers/comments work better.
Maybe people just want their answers, and don't want to think (much) to learn.
Rhetorical questions could be considered challenging, or even insulting, if being read incorrectly, like "Do you think I don't know?" or "If you know it, why don't you just tell me. I don't want more questions!"
Personally, I'd perceive tell-all answers as potentially more insulting, 'cause it assumes that you don't know what you're supposed to know. (And quite likely, we already know the answer.)
As an example,
> However, looking at the original source, I'm curious to know who spoke this sentence: "Benzodiazepines can impair that experience by numbing emotions, decreasing learning efficiency, and inhibiting memory processing of material learned in therapy."
Jeffrey Guina, Sarah R. Rossetter, Bethany J. Derhodes, Ramzi W. Nahhas, Randon S. Welton. Benzodiazepines for PTSD. Journal of Psychiatric Practice, 2015; 21 (4): 281 DOI: 10.1097/PRA.0000000000000091PerryW yesterday
That's a plain piece of information given by PerryW.
You still din' get my point @PerryW check the source...the 'quoted' sentence comes from nowhere. The previous sentence finishes with doctor and his colleagues 'write'. And the sentence is concerned is 'left alone' with no additional information. And I know the original source. — Maulik V yesterday
When I read that, I realized that the However, looking at the ... wasn't used humorously. The answerer seemed to forget that that pattern is common enough. So, I tried to remind him with...
@MaulikV [ "You're dirty," he said. "You ought to wash. Where did you go and what did you do? Tell me everything at once." ] Who would you think said "You ought to wash. ... Tell me everything at once."? — Damkerng T. yesterday
Then, I got this as the feedback.
@DamkerngT. in the original source... 'they concluded' or 'they added' would have worked. In your created example, I can add it!---> "You're dirty," he said. "You ought to wash. Where did you go and what did you do? Tell me everything at once," said her mother agreeing him. — Maulik V yesterday
Which made me realize that my message didn't reach him.
So I chose to insist that the example was real, without any further explanation.
I didn't create my example. I'm quite sure that you can find it on the web. — Damkerng T. yesterday
Fortunately, TRomano dropped by:
@Maulik: It's common reportage style for quotations to appear before and after an attribution. In the quotation that follows the attribution, it is understood that the source remains the same. "The building should be demolished," according to Joe Shmoe, City Engineer. "The foundation cracked during the earthquake." — TRomano yesterday
His tell-all comment worked better than my rhetorical comment, apparently.
oh...I see! @TRomano unfortunately have never come across such things in Indian newspapers! My bad! — Maulik V 17 hours ago
But it made me wonder if Indian newspapers really never use it...
22:42
Today I learned that "grammar school" are different in the UK and the US.
22:54
Then again, not all of my tell-all comments work very well.
The first time I read it, I thought will would be acceptable because I read it as If we're informed (or if we know) that the lava will come down as far as this, we will evacuate these houses. Why? Because in my opinion, by the time the lava comes down this far, you won't have any houses left to evacuate. But then again, this depends on the context and the intended meaning. It's unclear without context what as far as this means. (In other words, where is this?) — Damkerng T. Jul 6 at 22:03
Which ended up in my nativeness being questioned:
@DamkerngT. "Then 260.2 should apply." Why do you think so? I think the place is not very far(say 100 miles) from their houses but far enough(say 30 miles) for them to be able to evacuate. By the way, are you a native English speaker? — Deep Jul 7 at 11:55
(and I chose to do nothing but upvoting the top-voted answer after its edit half an hour ago)
23:16
The lahars zone is probably only as far as 35 miles from Mount St. Helens.
Anonymous
23:29
@DamkerngT. When I hear grammar school, I think of grade school, a.k.a. elementary school, a.k.a. primary school, where you have at least grades 1-6 or possibly K-6
nods -- It looks like it's more like a special kind of secondary school in the UK.
(I think I've got a small fish bone stuck in my throat too. What a day!)
Anonymous
We didn't learn any grammar in grammar school. We didn't call it grammar school either, really.
Anonymous
I'm not sure exactly where I picked up the term grammar school. I guess someone must have used the term at some point :-)
Anonymous
I don't recall specifically.
Anonymous
The most usual term where I grew up was grade school.
23:34
Wouldn't it be ironic if a grammar school doesn't teach grammar? Hehe!
@snailboat Does grade school cover grades 1 to 12?
Anonymous
No, it ends at 6, at least at the schools I'm familiar with.
Anonymous
Grades 7-12 are split between junior high (a.k.a. "middle school") and high school, usually either 7-8 and 9-12, or sometimes 7-9 and 10-12
Anonymous
I think sometimes it's split differently, too, like: K-5 (grade school), 6-8 (middle school), 9-12 (high school)
Anonymous
23:40
The junior high I went to relabeled itself, so it's no longer a "junior high". Now it's a "middle school"! They embraced the "middle school" philosophy. What's that? I have no idea.
Anonymous
But they wanted to change from two years to three years, I think.
Anonymous
Schools are confusing. They do lots of stuff.
Anonymous
I don't know why they do it, most of the time.
To keep young people busy? :P
I believe that the role of schools will need to change, at least gradually, in this era.
But schools in the US are probably already different.
When I was young, one difference I usually heard about our schools and schools in developed countries was that our schools teach our kids to "know" stuff, while schools in other countries teach kids to "think".
It could still be the same.

« first day (29 days earlier)      last day (3504 days later) »