Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work for MCPS and it is so embarrassing. Each time I have pointed it out i am ignored. .
Capitalize the "I" and use only one period per sentence.
Wait, there is more:
Add a coma before ‘and. Add a comma before ‘i.’ Define nouns so each use of the word ‘it’ clearly refers back to a noun. Overlooking peoples’ points and picking on proof reading errors is fun!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work for MCPS and it is so embarrassing. Each time I have pointed it out i am ignored. .
Capitalize the "I" and use only one period per sentence.
Wait, there is more:
Add a coma before ‘and. Add a comma before ‘i.’ Define nouns so each use of the word ‘it’ clearly refers back to a noun. Overlooking peoples’ points and picking on proof reading errors is fun!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work for MCPS and it is so embarrassing. Each time I have pointed it out i am ignored. .
Capitalize the "I" and use only one period per sentence.
Anonymous wrote:I work for MCPS and it is so embarrassing. Each time I have pointed it out i am ignored. .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah for real I can’t believe this happens lol and we’re surprised when student’s graduate high school barley knowing how to read and right
Is are students’ learning?
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Maybe we can get a pta to donate a subscription to Grammarly to the central office
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah for real I can’t believe this happens lol and we’re surprised when student’s graduate high school barley knowing how to read and right
Is are students’ learning?
![]()
Maybe we can get a pta to donate a subscription to Grammarly to the central office Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You'll get used to it, typos, bad grammar etc. MCPS is full of that, especially from teachers and school administrators. At first I was horrified, but like I say, you'll get used to it, as it's rife.
You are missing commas:
“At first, I was horrified, but, like I say, you'll get used to it, as it's rife.”
In fact, if you want to be even more correct, you should use this:
“At first, I was horrified, but, as I say, you'll get used to it, as it's rife.”
Anonymous wrote:You'll get used to it, typos, bad grammar etc. MCPS is full of that, especially from teachers and school administrators. At first I was horrified, but like I say, you'll get used to it, as it's rife.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Typos on the part of a school or it's staff are bad, embarrassing and funny. Here's something else that's funny and embarrassing. Parents with emails along the lines of "bigtitsgirl" or "hotmamacita" or "longandthick". I'm always surprised those parents aren't worried about using an email address like that.
Its, not it's.
Anonymous wrote:Honestly I think this is a sign of how much communication is going out and not having dedicated staff to proofread. I would rather have the frequent communication despite some proofreading issues than less communication or more money spent on communications staff. It is fair to say we all make mistakes that better proofreading would catch and when pointed out to us we all feel that ‘oops’ moment. I do not think this is an issue of undereducated teachers or administrators who do not know what a possessive noun is but rather of overworked teacher and administrators trying to get communication out quickly.