Following considerable buzz across campus and on the Internet, UNC’s School of Journalism and Mass Communication defended its choice to remove the spelling portion of its required test, even as opinions over the decision remain divided.
“I was disconcerted with the chatter on Facebook and Twitter that says we’re no longer valuing spelling at all,” professor Andy Bechtel said. “We still care about spelling, but we can teach it a different kind of way.”
Beginning in the fall of 2012, the test that all journalism students must pass with a 70 percent or higher before graduation will be composed of two-thirds grammar questions and one-third word usage questions.
The word usage section will replace the spelling portion of the test.
Bechtel said the new exam will better reflect tests administered by employers in the industry when evaluating job applicants.
Winston Cavin, a lecturer who teaches news writing in the school, said the change makes sense.
“Word usage is more relevant to good writing,” he said. “Probably half the spelling errors I see are actually word usage errors with homonyms.”
While the school cited technology like spell-check as one of the reasons it chose to eliminate the spelling portion, that wasn’t the only factor involved in updating the test, Bechtel said.
“Spell-check has actually aided and abetted the word usage problem,” Cavin said.