TEAMS: San Francisco 49ers, Detroit Lions, New England Patriots
Via Helmet2Helmet:

Apparently, some NFLers aren’t smarter than second graders.
This past week, a second-grade class from Elmwood Franklin Elementary in Buffalo, N.Y. sharpened their grammatical knowledge by correcting tweets from three players: 49ers cornerback Chris Culliver, Lions receiver Titus Young, and Patriots receiver Wes Welker.
They shared the results on their Facebook page, along with the following description:
Second graders are serious fans of football—and grammar! Elmwood Franklin School’s second grade students applied their lessons in proper sentence structure, noun and verb usage, spelling, and punctuation to correct the tweets of professional football players. The students partnered in groups and together found several mistakes in these tweets, including the incorrect spelling of “a lot.”


Culliver’s original tweet has since been deleted. It has not been a good week for the 24-year-old, who made waves with his anti-gay remarks. Young can’t seem to keep his name out of the headlines, so this is no surprise. Welker … well, we’ll chalk it up to the “holiday spirit.”
It’s common knowledge that a vast majority — OK, pretty much all — professional athletes will never become Pulitzer Prize-winning scribes. Kudos to these kids for furthering that perception in a pretty creative way.
[H/T Deadspin]
49ers' Culliver sorry for remarks
49′ers Chris Culliver to undergo sensitivity training following anti-gay remarks
Culliver to have sensitivity training
Chris Culliver Apologizes for Anti-Gay Remarks, Claims He Was ‘Just Kidding Around’ With Artie Lange
Patriots Open To Re-Signing WR Wes Welker?
Culliver to receive sensitivity training following the Super Bowl
Chris Culliver's Comments: NFL Has A Long Way To Go
Patriots’ owner says agents can mess up and keep Wes Welker from re-signing
Kwame Harris: Chris Culliver spreading ‘vitriol and hate’
Patriots Haven't Talked Contract With WR Wes Welker
Michael Crabtree says he once got into it with Wes Welker at Texas Tech
2nd graders learn grammar by correcting tweets from NFL players
Michael Crabtree ‘Got into It’ With Wes Welker at Texas Tech, Now Calls Patriots Receiver as a ‘Legend’
Terrell Suggs Says Ravens Would Welcome A Gay Teammate
Homosexuality a choice tolerate: Mike Ditka
Manuel: Bills' offense 'easier' than Florida State's
According to Buffalo's first-round draft pick, quarterback E.J. Manuel, the team's offense has been easier to learn than his alma mater's.
Howard intrigued by HOU, DAL?
Dwight Howard's season with the Lakers came to an early exit this postseason, but it's not too late to speculate where he may be headed next (if anywhere).
RGIII thanks fans for wedding gifts
Redskins fans showed their support for their star quarterback, surprising him and his fiancee by buying up every gift in their wedding registry.
LeBron to Vogel: Not just next team
After advancing to the conference semis, Frank Vogel referred to the Heat as the next team in their championship run, a comment LeBron James took umbrage with.
Beal: Derrick Rose is scared
Bradley Beal may have only been a rookie this year, but he called out veteran star Derrick Rose for sitting the year out with his injury.
Kobe responds to Phil's comparison
Kobe Bryant tweeted a response to Phil Jackson comparing him with Michael Jordan in his upcoming book. See what he said.
Presti: Thunder not amnestying Perk
Oklahoma City Thunder GM Sam Presti says the team is not planning to amnesty center Kendrick Perkins despite his big salary.
Bush: Stafford can be a Hall of Famer
Reggie Bush joined the Lions this offseason, and he is already complimentary of his new quarterback, Matthew Stafford.
Oxbow upsets Orb at Preakness
Oxbow upset Orb to win the 138th Preakness Stakes, ending Orb's bid to win the Triple Crown. Watch a replay of the race.
Sharks fined $100k for GM comments
The San Jose Sharks were fined the huge sum of $100,000 for GM Doug Wilson's comments on the Raffi Torres suspension. What did he say?
| Latest Rumors | The Backyard | Going Viral |
|
|
Today's Best Stuff |
For BloggersJoin the Yardbarker Network for more promotion, traffic, and money. |
Company Info |
Help |
What is Yardbarker?Yardbarker is the largest network of sports blogs and pro athlete blogs on the web. This site is the hub of the Yardbarker Network, where our editors and algorithms curate the best sports content from our network and beyond. |










|
February 03, 2013























You can't blame everything on stupidity, or anal octalitis. Keep your heads out of your butt. People are watching. Harp on the bright side.
WTF-why there's focalpoint
Does this teacher not have a clue that when it comes to tweeting and texting, there are no rules, other than to keep it clean. Tweeting and texting is personal, creative shorthand.
Its intention, I thought, was to promote expression, eliminating barriers that semantics can create.
This incident is reminiscent of an attitude from 80 years ago, when, especially minorities were told, "If they couldn't read, they couldn't vote."
"Grammar police" cannot take away or oppress our right to freedom of expression.
I believe this teacher was mistaken. She put a grammar lesson above the ethical lesson of refraining from unnecessary criticism of others. If she had created sentences for the kids to improve upon, that would've been ok.
We never have to put down others to raise up ourselves.
Update: February 02, 2013
(no update)
Their model challenges us to communicate without judgment, hostility, sarcasm, comparisons, etc.
It's amazing; it supports development of autonomy and the practice of ethics.
By the way, I appreciate the long suffering of teachers and I couldn't do it.
Please do use both of my responses in your debate class. I believe we are coming from different perspectives.
I expect then, you will have the courage to share, verbatim, your response(s) to me. That is sure to elicit some lively class discussion.
I would've preferred to see the teacher remove the names of the tweets' authors. There's no need to teach at the expense of others.
Tweets and texts are spontaneous, real-time communications from imperfect beings. Do we want these connections with others; or, for lack of tolerance, do we sacrifice them?
Comparing tweets to formal English, is like comparing apples to oranges.
In the pursuit of effective communication, we benefit from embracing all forms: written, spoken, unspoken, formal and informal.
You sound like a complete idiot, how did you come to the conclusion the poster was inbred? I think you should use your reply in your debate class. Are you angry that you still live in your parents basement at forty? And please tell us how attended or unattended has any thing to do with the results of leaving ice cream on the sidewalk?
Good job Kids!
Let's face it this wasn't for a lesson for the kids it was so the teacher could get on national news.