galaxyrocker wrote:
Actually, I think the whole 'Is fearr Gaeilge bhriste ná Béarla cliste' is a huge issue in the language. I'm not against learner's trying to speak and practice the language to improve, but so many seem to be happy with their mistakes, and they always quote that saying. I once got banned from a group for saying something like, "Is fearr, cinnte, ach is fearr Gaeilge cheart ná Gaeilge bhriste". And this was after they asked me to help correct mistakes. So many people just seem to equate 'broken Irish' with 'good Irish' anymore, because of, well, 'New Irish'.
I've encountered some of that too. One the one hand, I agree...we want people to speak, and to not be afraid of making mistakes (fear of making mistakes is a huge barrier to adult learners). On the other hand, some people get REALLY bent out of shape when you offer a grammatical or pronunciation correction.
In general, if I'm on a group that is designed to foster conversation, such as Gaeilge Amháin, I figure the aim is to keep people speaking, so I neither offer nor expect corrections (if someone does correct me, that's OK, but I figure the goal is to get people to relax and communicate). But in a group that's geared toward teaching or learning (including this forum), I both make and invite corrections. If you're going to get people speaking, you kind of need both situations, I think. We want people to be comfortable practicing, but that doesn't mean "everything goes."
Redwolf