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If you’re correcting grammar on social media, you’re just being a jerk

I’d like to take a moment to talk about correcting grammar.

(Or spelling, or punctuation, or writing in general.)

I get paid to correct others’ grammar for a living. I read dozens of pages every day, looking for editing mistakes. Sometimes, it makes my head hurt.

So, when I log out for the day, the last thing I want to do is correct grammar on my free time. I used to have no problem with it, but over the last few years, I’ve started to that correcting grammar (particularly in social media) is simply just classist, particularly if you do it in a public comment, rather than in a private message.

Here are 5 reasons you should stop correcting grammar on social media.

1. Correcting grammar unsolicited is dismissive.

It ignores the points a person raises in their comments and tries to position them as unreliable. This is unfortunate; what the author was saying might have been important, valid, and legitimate, but doubt is cast on that legitimacy for something as benign as a spelling or grammar mistake.

2. Correcting grammar is selfish.

Related to this is the idea that not only does the responder try to delegitimatize the author’s credibility, but they try to boost their own. By making the author look illiterate, they try to make themselves, by default, look intelligent, independent of the merits of the respective messages themselves.

3. Correcting grammar is reductionistic.

When we correct grammar, we dismiss the multiple reasons why incorrect grammar might exist in the first place. Sometimes the error is the result of poor typing or autocorrect. We all do it. Sometimes, it’s because someone has difficulty with grammar—perhaps language was something they struggled with in school. Even if they struggle with grammar academically, it doesn’t mean their message should be ignored.

4. Correcting grammar is pointless.

Grammar mistakes rarely impede the message. Certainly comments occasionally appear in a conversation that make absolutely no sense grammatically, but I propose that the majority of comments with grammar, spelling, and other mistakes are generally still understood. The fact that the responder can correct the author shows that the message was clearly received, despite any errors.

5. Correcting grammar is distracting.

Correcting mistakes instead of engaging with someone’s points is nothing more than distraction tactics. It’s lazy and dishonest debate. Serious debaters are smart enough to interpret the message and respond to its substance. Even if the grammar is horrendous, a simple and polite rephrasing request will go a long way to fostering respect and mature dialogue.

The next time you’re tempted to correct someone’s grammar online, ask yourself if any real purpose is served by it. Or are you just fuelling your own ego?

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