Editor for this issue: Joel Jenkins <joellinguistlist.org>
A day of talks and discussion on aspects of English grammar
Are you sat down or sitting down while reading this? Have you got or do you have a preference for one form over the other? English has a number of ways of expressing the same concept, and with approximately 400 million mother-tongue speakers and an estimated 1.4 billion non-native speakers it has become a diverse, flexible language that continues to adapt, evolve – and provoke strong reactions. You only need to search for #grammar on X or Bluesky to see what we mean!
Developments in the National Curriculum for England have placed grammar in schools at centre stage once more, and divided opinion among politicians, teachers, linguists and journalists, as well as the wider public, on how and whether it should be taught. How have teachers implemented changes to their teaching and learning programmes to adapt to the new syllabuses, assessment criteria and tests? What resources are available for students, teachers and the general public to learn more about English grammar, and how reliable are they? What is or should be the role of English grammar teaching in schools today and why is this so controversial? What do teachers, professionals, academics and the general public feel is the cultural and educational significance of knowledge about the language?
Join us for a day of talks and discussion, and feel free to ask our panel of experts to explore any aspect of English grammar from 'ain’t' to 'innit'.
Presented by the Survey of English Usage at University College London, the British Library and the University of Oxford.
URL: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/english/research/survey-english-usage/english-grammar-day
Linguistic Field(s): General Linguistics
Subject Language(s): English (eng)
Language Family(ies): English based
Page Updated: 13-Jun-2025
LINGUIST List is supported by the following publishers: