| You’ve Got Mail! |

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| You've Got Mail! |Although technology has helped bridge distances and allowed communication to become immediate, it has also led to major changes in how younger generations write. Problems with punctuation, grammar and spelling are symptomatic of a culture that now relies on texts and direct messages as a means of communication. Fragments have replaced complete sentences, shorthand and abbreviations have essentially led to a new language in itself and feelings have been replaced by range of emojis. 

Fun and creative activities are needed to motivate technology-obsessed students to put down their smart phones and pick up their pens again. In an attempt to help students practice and develop their literacy in English and encourage their desire to write, the 4th year students are partaking in a new penfriend project in conjunction with the 4th year students in Salesianos Évora and Salesianas Setúbal. But why start a penfriend project at all?

Having a penfriend has numerous benefits, both educational and social. To begin with, students are given an opportunity to write about real-life topics for a “real audience” of their own age. They also have a unique opportunity to use grammar structures and recycle (even expand) their vocabulary. Having a penfriend not only promotes the development of reading and writing, it fosters social skills such as empathy and exposes students to different realities and points of views, too. It encourages them to find common bonds and leads them to being interested in others, which complements their developmental stage at this age.  Reverting to “snail mail” also forces students who are accustomed to immediate gratification to actually wait for a response. The anticipation can help get them excited about reading what their new friend has to say and, consequently, writing back to them. 

“In an age like ours, which is not given to letter-writing, we forget what an important part it used to play in people’s lives” (Anatole Broyard). For generations people have used letters to keep in touch, so why not keep that tradition alive? Taking the time to hand write a message, seal the envelope, buy a stamp and mail a letter yourself is an act that truly shows someone that you care.

Claudia, Ingrid and Grace
| English teachers