Among high school students and college students, you always here the arguement that "Math, Science, Foreign Language, and History all serve some sort of practical purpose that can aid you in the job market, but all learning about literature helps you with job-market-wise is to become a literature educator or critic."
Basically, there is a strong feeling that the learning of literature in and of itself is not useful as a core-curriculum class, the arguement then being that English should primarily focus on writing and the study of the English grammatical theories (advanced English linguistics).
Now there are concerns that teaching literature does fufill, including:
-Similar to one of the arguements for history, they provide a cultural background and a universal reference point of occurence we can refer to. So in the same way we can all know about WWII and use it in analogies, we can also use Shakespeare.
-Literature does provide a way to improve reading comprehension
But, still, I do feel that perhaps the importance of literature from a compulsory academic point of view is times over-estimated. Whereas history, the other great social science, aids one in a myriad of fields, especially ones in government and journalistic work, literature still is not really necessary to learn about except to teach it or study it. Publishing and creative writing both can be pursued through other much more lucrative fields, such as English language and business.
So, my belief then is that the best way to treat this situation is this. In high schools and perhaps colleges, for English requirements, students should be offered two options.
1. An English course which primarily focuses on literature
2. An English course which primarily focuses on linguistics
The literature one will be a traditional later-grades English class, where the writing is primarily essays relating to how well you've studied a work of literature and much of the class has to do with comprehension, while the linguistics one will focus much more on learning about the craft of writing in general along with the study of the language and its facets in high level detail. This one might go in depth on the theories behind clause usage and the numerous meanings of words based on contexts, etc.
I think this would be a good idea and aid a lot of students that want to gain English skills more than cultural skills.


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