Linguists Advocate Restoring Speech As Primary Knowledge

An academic linguist argues today that spoken language, not writing, is the fundamental basis of language and thought, shaped historically and developmentally. The essay notes writing's institutional role—from recordkeeping to colonial language imposition—and warns that large language models challenge the primacy of written assessment. It recommends greater emphasis on oral assessment and spoken workflows to preserve linguistic diversity and ensure authentic evaluation.
Key Points
- 1Argue speech precedes writing historically, developmentally, and cognitively, making speech linguists' primary focus.
- 2Highlight that writing institutionalized knowledge and enabled administrative, scientific, and colonial power since 1492.
- 3Recommend oral assessments and spoken workflows to counter AI-generated essays and broaden linguistic inclusion.
Scoring Rationale
Timely, actionable perspective on LLMs in education but lacks new empirical evidence or broad consensus.
Sources
Public references used for this report.
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