 Originally Posted by drewmandan
I don't understand this comment. Spelling a word the wrong way takes just as much effort as spelling it the correct way. So it's like you're not sure what the correct spelling is, and the effort you're referring to is the effort of trying to figure out how to spell certain words. That's the impression I get from this post.
It isn't about being "unsure." It is about typing quickly. For example "beginning" was an obvious fault of typing too fast, "tomarro" was an obvious fact of allowing my fingers to spell based on how it sounds. When you type at a relatively high speed you end up typing the same way you speak, based on how it sounds. Since tomarro and tomorrow sound the same, I don't think about it when I type. If I were worrying about the spelling, I would be typing at the same speed, but I would be more conscious about the correct spelling verses how it sounds. When it comes to language people develop wierd ways of speaking. Usually, however, people can halt their mannerisms when in need. The same applies to typing.
One example is people who type "should of" instead of "should have" based on the fact that this is how they speak it. When reflecting over their writing most people will notice the obvious fault of writing "should of." They don't write it because they think that when speaking they are actually saying "should of" they write it because they write how it sounds, and it sounds like should of rather than should have.
 Originally Posted by drewmandan
The government adding an essay question isn't an example of new technology; it's an example of government expansion and the hiring of more markers.
Cause the technology to transmit massive amounts of data has been around forever...and was at its best and capable of being utilized to its fullest since before the 1980s. Certainly this is true. Getting the information to the "markers" would have been so easy.
I think you're under the presupposition that only one thing can be the cause of something.
http://homeworktips.about.com/od/sta.../a/writing.htm
"the essay requirement was recommended and considered long ago, but the technology of the day couldn't accommodate the transmitting and grading of essays on a large scale. Technology has changed, and so has the test."
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