Text Messaging and Literacy - The Evidence
Text Messaging and Literacy - The Evidence
Text Messaging and Literacy - The Evidence
Evidence
As children are given mobile phones at increasingly younger ages, there is consider-
able media coverage of claims that mobile phones, and text messaging in particular,
are responsible for declining levels of literacy in children and young people. Such
claims are often adopted wholesale by teachers and parents, despite the fact that
there is an empirical literature which has failed to find a basis to these claims, and
to the contrary has found that text messaging is supporting children’s literacy skills.
Written by leading international researchers, Text Messaging and Literacy –
The Evidence presents an overview and discussion of the academic evidence for
and against the use of text messaging and mobile phones in supporting literate
activity, and discusses what conclusions we can and should draw about the impact
of mobile phones and their potential role in education. Areas covered include:
In challenging existing assumptions, the authors present the cutting edge of inter-
national research, highlighting their own studies involving children of all ages,
adolescents and adults. This ground-breaking book is essential reading for both
researchers and students in education, educational psychology, literacy and new
media and its impact on learning.
Typeset in Galliard
by Book Now Ltd, London
Contents
List of illustrations ix
About the authors xi
Preface xiii
Acknowledgements xv
Tables
Figures
This book is concerned with the impact that the technological phenomenon of
text messaging has had on the literacy skills of children and adults, and how the
empirical evidence on this relates to the popular perceptions and portrayal of
this matter in newspapers, internet discussion forums and blogs. The summary
of this book is that public understanding of how texting relates to literacy skills
does not necessarily reflect the reality of the research evidence on this topic. This
is understandable in the face of speculative media coverage which has promoted
discussion of how declining literacy standards amongst younger people must be
linked to their increased use of, and addiction to, new technologies and techno-
logical practices which make some others feel disenfranchised. As academics, we
consumed these newspaper narratives and were struck by how strongly asserted
they were in the absence of systematic empirical work in the area. Our work and
that of others has now explored the actual evidence for these popular accounts
and this book is our attempt to organise and summarise the resulting evidence on
the topic in a way that makes sense of the data, and aims to clarify what can and
cannot be said about the positive and negative contributions of texting to rising
or falling standards in literacy.
As you may be able to tell, this is a book born partly out of frustration with
the persistent, stereotypical views of technologically-literate children and young
people, but our approach to the research (both the conduct of our own, and the
review of others’ work) was open-minded, and continues to be so. Some areas pre-
sent the reader with consistency and coherence, whereas others are more equivocal
and nuanced in their messages. Crucially, we also include a critical evaluation of
the methods that have been used to examine the impact of text messaging on lit-
eracy skills. We felt that this was an essential component of any discussion of what
can and cannot be said about texting and educational outcomes.
In Chapter 6 we also present new data which examines the nature of chil-
dren’s use of their mobile phones and relates this to their performance on
measures of written language processing. This study was conducted in an
attempt to understand whether some of the popular characterisations of chil-
dren and their mobile phone use were valid, and if they were, to examine the
extent to which they were linked to academic performance. These new data,
xiv Preface
like so much of the work in this book, challenge the popular portrayal of
children as technologically dependent.
We hope that this book is useful in drawing together a range of work in this
area, such that the reader can draw his or her own conclusions about the perils
and pitfalls of texting in the twenty-first century. As is so often the case, more
work needs to be conducted in this area, but there is an evidence base out there
which parents, journalists and educators can draw on when debating the impact
of children’s technological participation in mobile phone culture.
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank all the colleagues who have supported both their
research work in this area and their work on this book. In particular, we would
like to recognise the contribution and assistance of the following colleagues, stu-
dents and friends: Victoria Bell (who fired our interest in all of this in the first
place), Samantha Lowry (née Bowyer), Puja Joshi, Emma Jackson, Sam Waldron,
Lucy Hart, Roy Bhakta, Claire Pillinger, Abbie Grace, Sarah De Jonge, Cathy
Bushnell, Damon Binning, Jen Clayton, and L, H, O, E, J & G (who cn txt BP
thru blu sky).
We also gratefully acknowledge the financial support of the following agencies/
organisations which have funded some of the research detailed in this book:
Before we look at the rise of mobile phones, and on to texting more specifi-
cally, we look briefly at the historical development of technologically-mediated
communication, to contextualise the current use of mobile phones by adults
and children worldwide. We pay particular attention to the increased popularity
of and interest in text messaging as a function of these devices, and reflect on
the nature of text versus talk in this very specific context.
something of the context from which one was writing, so that the recipient
would have other cues through which to appreciate the nuance of the words
used. The writer would also be unable to know clearly the context in which the
recipient would read the words, not only because of the distance that required
writing, but also because the recipient would read the words in a future at least
partially unknowable to the writer, by which time the context of the writer
would have changed in ways equally unknowable to the recipient.
The telephone minimised the elements of unknowable intervening circum-
stances, but – at least in the days before video-conferencing, computers and
Skype, and mobile phones with cameras – it did not allow the distant parties to
see the contexts the speakers were in at that moment. There was still a perceptual
distance that could mitigate against clear understanding, as might be appreciated
today if we compare a conversation with a person in the passenger seat while we
are driving, with a conversation with the same person through a mobile phone
while we are driving – even with a hands-free set. The passenger can see when the
vehicle in front brakes suddenly and swerves, but the person on the other end of
the phone can only imagine why the conversation suddenly ends, as the driver
attends to a more pressing situation.
However, responses in a real-time distant conversation could be nearly
immediate for the first time in history, and the distant person could be known
more clearly as present. The absent other could be held more closely in the
social circle of the present, and common, shared understanding more reliably
affirmed. The social circle of the present expanded considerably with the advent
of the telephone, and sharing the moment in conversation allowed access to a
more informal type of communication because of that shared understanding.
The telephone became domesticated – a process Silverstone and Haddon
(1996) described as the way a new item becomes a part of ordinary,
everyday living. This process developed over the next several decades after
its invention, and some readers may remember when a telephone was
first installed for their use. Landlines spread across the United States,
across Britain, Europe, under the seas, to much of the inhabited world,
although, even today, some may be waiting for a telephone landline to
reach them. Some of those, however, have been able to bypass the wait,
because satellite-relayed cell phone coverage has reached them before lan-
dlines. We touch on this situation later with regard to keeping minority
languages alive. During the 1950s the telephone became commonly
thought of not just as an information device, but as a device for social
purposes. However, the novelty of distant real-time communication has
long ceased to astonish. The telephone in some form is an essential part
of life in the modern world, and it is difficult to imagine life without it.
As part of its domestication, the name of the device itself became short-
ened through familiarity and common use to phone in common parlance,
and the noun forms telephone or phone came to have verbal forms, to telephone
or to phone, which have, through more familiarity, come to be represented
Mobile phone use and the rise of texting 3
as to call or to ring, and have colloquial versions, such as I’ll give you a
buzz, or, for a text message, I’ll ping you. The same technological neolo-
gisms exist in other languages, for example Finnish, where to send a text
message is tekstata, a linguistic analogue to kuklata, to google.
numbers gave the exchange code in letter form, for example ‘REdbank 6
1122’. But the keys marked with letters were not used to send messages con-
structed of letters (although recent advertising has occasionally returned to
the idea of remembering a phone number by its word equivalent, for example
‘phone CLEAR66’).
The first text messages were sent in Finland in the 1980s by Nokia engi-
neers exploring their potential, using up bandwidth not being used by talk
transmission, and a text facility was originally offered free of charge to phone
customers. The original 160 character limit per text was put in place in
1986 by Friedhelm Hillebrand, chairman of the nonvoice services commit-
tee within the Global System for Mobile Communications (GSM) on the
basis that most postcards and most Telex messages fit within that limit (Los
Angeles Times, 2009). Text messages were first sent by the general public
in Finland during 1995, and had been enthusiastically taken up by teenagers
by 1998 (Kasesniemi & Rautiainen, 2002). Because of the early develop-
ment of mobile phone technology in Finland, mobile phones rapidly became
domesticated into Finnish life, but originally were used mainly for business
information sharing purposes, as in many other places during the spread of
their popularity. Texts were often first used to notify recipients of other com-
munications, for example emails or phone messages. Possibilities for social,
phatic communication via texting grew rapidly as more phones were taken up
by young adults and, increasingly, teens and children.
Texting, rather than talking, has become the medium of choice for the
majority of European mobile phone users, and users in Italy, Japan and Korea
were particularly prone to mention texting before talk (Baron, 2010). In
the United States, take-up of texting has been slower, attributable at least
in part to longer availability and wider expertise with the personal computer
and internet access domestically. The mobile’s texting facility took longer to
become popular, but was enthusiastically embraced by the young. A set of
young US teens, speaking publicly about their digital lives in 2007, admit-
ted sometimes obsessive texting that could become a problem to them (Kids
Speak Out, 2007). Later that year, it was reported that there were, for the first
time, more texts sent than calls made in the United States on mobile phones
(Mindlin, 2008).
closer to conscious attention than they might if we had not so recently and so
often communicated with them, and we might expect a priming effect, where
we would be increasingly responsive to cues that would lead us to thoughts of
those others, and away from attention to our immediate activities.
Gergen (2002) has discussed the challenge of ‘absent presence’, where
technologies allow us to be cognitively and emotionally absent from our
immediate context in which we are physically present, essentially to be drawn
away from our immediate face-to-face circle. He grants that the mobile phone,
although it may have this potential, also has the potential we suggest here,
namely to draw absent others into our presence. Finding the balance between
those potentials is necessary to maintain the more complex communication
and relationship circles technology has afforded. Where possession of a mobile
phone may not mean that we wish to be always in contact with someone
else, we have come to expect the potential for contact as and when we wish.
We have also had to consider, for example, the implications of other time
zones, which puts functional limits on contacts, regardless of technological
availability.
Two areas in which cultural changes have been evident derive from the pos-
sibilities of a perpetual presence of absent others, and a perpetual absence of
our present selves. Where these changes are most evident in social behaviour,
they also have an impact on the use of language, which is the focus of this
book. One change is the development of a set of acceptable social standards
for use of mobile phones in public spaces. These vary from place to place
(Baron, 2008; Baron & Hård af Segerstad, 2010), from strong restriction of
talk on mobiles in public in Japan, to a more permissive standard of private
chat in public in Italy; even within countries, or between social groups, those
standards vary. Learning the local set of conventions is a requirement – or at
least desirable – for fluid social relations, as one moves from place to place,
or contacts others in places where the etiquette is different from one’s own.
In the case of children, there are locations that are defined by adults as
‘inappropriate’ contexts for mobile phone use, the most common of which is
on school sites. As we have seen, however, children may not share that defini-
tion, and this has the potential for conflict.
Another area of change concerns the extent to which one lives one’s pri-
vate life in the public gaze. When the circle of ‘present others’ extends across
the globe, many have responded by inviting a far wider circle of others to
share their personal lives. The enthusiastic embrace of social networking
sites on the internet demonstrates the ease and desirability of that increas-
ingly public stance. It is not our purpose here to discuss communication or
social relations conducted through the internet (many others have explored
these issues in depth, e.g. Baron, 2008; Crystal, 2006a; Danet & Herring
2007; Ellison, Steinfeld and Lampe, 2007; Johnson & Ensslin, 2007; Katz
& Aakhus, 2002; Rosen, 2007; Thurlow, Lengel & Tomic, 2004; Tong,
Van Der Heide, Langwell & Walther, 2008), but the blossoming of internet
Mobile phone use and the rise of texting 7
social and personal presence is related to the form of language that is used
in ever greater swathes of individuals’ communication. Drawing such a wide
collection of others into one’s personal circle, where the register of language
can be casual and informal, as it has traditionally been in the smaller circles
of personal conversation, suggests that a greater proportion of one’s writ-
ten communication may be in a more casual, unregulated style. This casual
style also works to get across communicative intent, even among the present
absent, or it would not continue to be used.
It has been widely suggested that more people are writing than ever before
(e.g. Roschke 2008), with all the text that is created in text messages, emails,
instant messages, tweets, blogs, internet chat sites and social networking sites.
We have noted elsewhere (Veater, Plester & Wood, 2010) that children with
dyslexia text with as much enthusiasm as other children, where they have often
withdrawn from voluntary written language. The conventions of language pol-
icy established by users within those contexts have generally abandoned many
of the constraints of formal written language, because they are not required
in informal conversation, and those settings are often seen to be informal and
conversational in nature.
Baron (2008) has argued that, because there is so much written text,
because it is so easy to create that it is all around us all the time, standards
of good writing may be less falling than becoming irrelevant. Because we
are driven by the clock, and the ability to get our meaning across quickly
is important, formal written language rules have less importance than they
once had, and we take less pride in writing formally. Baron uses the term
‘whateverism’ to describe the attitude of accepting uncritically written text
that does not conform to traditional standards, even within situations where
it would seem that it should, such as publishers’ documents. Where Stanovich
and his colleagues (e.g. Cipielewski and Stanovich, 1992; Stanovich & West,
1989) have argued that exposure to the written word is a strong predictor of
literacy skills in young and older adults as well as children, the measures they
used would limit that exposure to well-crafted written language. Uncritical
immersion in informal text may not have the same power, or may have a dif-
ferent outcome, and research has addressed the question in various ways (see
Chapter 3).
even when the space or time requirements do not demand abbreviation. Word
play here rests on the difference between the pronunciation of spoken, casual
register language or spoken accent, and the pronunciation of the same words
as they are read aloud from a standard English rendering. Textisms often play
to this difference.
It is curious that when a novelist renders a dialect or accent in print so that
the sounds of the spoken words will survive when read as they are printed,
the accomplishment may be seen as skilled, excellent writing. When a child or
teen writing a text does the same thing, it may be seen as a sign of the poverty
or deterioration of the writer’s language skills, if not of the language itself. In
the following chapter, we will consider the way text language has been rep-
resented in the media – the alarm widely sounded – and set that against the
language actually used in text messages by children and young adults. We will
also look at the way some educators and other commentators have responded
more positively to the phenomenon of texting.
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