Is texting killing civilization?
There has even been a number of small studies that has said the complete opposite. Texting doesn’t ruin literacy skills, instead it enhances them. Since the beginning of time “new technologies have consistently threatened old ones, so cries that “texting is killing civilization” are part of a big history trashing new media (Justice 312).
Does texting improve reading skills?
For example, Kat Fox found that texting improved texters summarizing skills, or the group of researchers at Coventry University whom discovered that the more pre-teen children used text abbreviations, the more likely they were to score higher on reading and vocabulary tests, vice versa.
Is texting bad for your linguistic skills?
Mobile phones have dramatically changed our lives. Although many linguists tend to refute the claims against the negative effects of texting on the linguistic skills of young people, U.S. statistics show undisputed decline of such skills in recent years. Such decline coincided with the proliferation of texting use by U.S. teens.
Does knowledge of text abbreviations affect children's literacy?
In a study of whether texting and knowledge of text abbreviations adversely affect children’s literacy attainment, “there was no evidence that knowledge of textisms by ore-teen children has any negative association with their written language competence.