With the release of the revised Grades 1 – 8 Language curriculum (2023) and the addition of more explicit instruction in the language conventions needed to write, I began reflecting on my own educational experiences related to learning language conventions, particularly the one on grammar.
When I reflect on my educational experiences as an elementary student in Alberta and Ontario’s publicly funded school systems, I can recall no moment when I received explicit instruction in grammar. This is not to say that I didn’t receive explicit instruction in grammar from competent teachers, it’s just to say that I cannot recall any. If I speculate, my inability to recall explicitly learning grammar may be for several reasons. Some of those reasons may include sparse grammar lessons, studying grammar in siloed lessons that didn’t help me to understand the direct connection to writing, other areas of language and literacy being prioritized over grammar instruction, or perhaps a combination of these or a list of entirely different reasons altogether. Instead of accepting any of these speculations, I’ll just share what I’ve come to accept which is I don’t know why I can’t remember learning grammar.
What I find interesting is that I can vividly recall receiving explicit instruction in other areas of language and literacy. When I was in kindergarten, I remember reciting the alphabet with my peers and teacher, identifying upper- and lower-case letters, and explicitly learning letter sounds. In grades 1, 4, and 7 I recall learning transcription skills. First print, then cursive, and finally keyboarding. In primary and junior grades, I remember my teachers modelling then instructing me to use my knowledge of phonics to blend letter sounds together to decode unfamiliar words then segment letter sounds apart to encode and spell words. There are other foundational language and literacy skills I can easily recall explicitly learning from skilled teachers however, the absence of grammar from the above examples leads me to wonder if I received explicit instruction in the discipline, shouldn’t I be able to remember it.
Further thinking about my educational experiences as an adult student enrolled in an Ontario teacher preparation program, I recall receiving no training on how to explicitly teach grammar to elementary students. Again, I have no definitive reason to explain why grammar instruction was missing from my pre-service teacher program despite the presence of specific grammar expectations in the 2006 iteration of the revised Grades 1 – 8 Language curriculum. However, I can recall explicitly learning instructional approaches to support teaching other expectations found in language curriculum.
From the absence of explicit grammar instruction in my formal schooling experiences, it seemed of minor importance in comparison to other perhaps more major areas of language and literacy learning such as phonics, transcription, and spelling. As I continue to think about these collective schooling experiences, I’ve deduced that I must’ve developed an implicit knowledge of grammar at some point because I applied it throughout my elementary, secondary, and post-secondary education to write.
Yet, what I learned from my experience working overseas in the role of English as a foreign language teacher, is that I need an explicit knowledge of grammar to teach it because I need to able to explain to students how a competent knowledge of grammar supports their writing compositions. I also accepted that my lack of explicit grammar knowledge did not absolve me of my responsibility to teach it when the school curriculum mandated it.
In my next post, I’ll share the approaches I used to close the gaps in my grammar knowledge so I could better teach students the discipline.





