Originally posted by: dullard
Originally posted by: HotChic
Oh, there are tons of people employed at the places I've worked that can spell at all, so don't worry that anybody is being excluded. However, I've noted that many of these people apply the same dedication and attention they do to professionalism in their business communication to all their work, meaning that other people are constantly cleaning up after them.
Honestly, we were all taught in school how to spell and properly use grammar. It isn't that difficult and it helps put you in the best light you can be. Why wouldn't you make the effort?
I'm not trying to attack your methods. I agree, a spelling error/grammar error should put up a red flag. It shouldn't ever exclude someone (otherwise it can turn into a xenophobic / social-economic discrimination). The red flag should signal that you need to focus on (a) was it a fluke or (b) was it a systematic lack of understanding / professionalism / mastery of the language etc. If it was a fluke, the grammar error was meaningless. If it was a systematic problem, don't hire the person.
But in the end, people overemphasize the importance of spelling and grammar. If you can get your point across, you did good enough. Lets argue over more important things on the internet.
I think I type fairly well. I mostly use proper grammar and spelling. But I know I have problems. Grammar nazis need to learn manners and let my mistakes (and other poster's mistakes) slide.