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School teacher corrects English of Donald Trump 's letter

May 29, 2018 00:00:00


A retired American secondary school English teacher has corrected a letter she received from US President Donald Trump and sent it back to the White House so that he can learn from mistakes, reports bdnews24.com.

The letter, dated May 3 and printed on White House stationery, was addressed to Yvonne Mason, 61, a former English teacher from Atlanta who retired last year but was still in grading mode, according to The Daily Mail.

Mason said the letter was full of redundancies, faulty capitalisation and had a lack of clarity and specificity.

According to the Mail online, Yvonne Mason had written to Trump in the wake of the mass shooting in Parkland, Florida and asked him to meet the families of the victims so they could question him about school safety.

"When you get letters from the highest level of government, you expect them to be at least mechanically correct," Mason told the Greenville News.

Mason posted a photo of the letter, bearing President Trump's signature, on which she has made her own corrections.

'Have y'all tried grammar style check?' she wrote across the top of the note.

The former teacher circled both and gave brief explanations why the usage was incorrect. Another sentence, talking about how Trump had introduced a 'rule' banning devices into machine guns was branded unclear.

Explain 'rule', she wrote.

"Poor writing is not something I abide," said Mason. "If someone is capable of doing better, then they should do better."

"If it had been written in middle school, I would give it a C or C-plus. If it had been written in high school, I would give it a D," she told South Carolina's Greenville News.

"If my students turned that in they would get exactly the same marks,' she told the New York Times.

Mason also says that the letter failed to address her concerns, but merely listed actions that had taken place after the shooting, such as listening sessions and the STOP School Violence Act.

When she received the letter in the mail, she pulled out her go-to purple pen and started making corrections. Then she snapped a picture, posted it on Facebook and mailed it back to the White House, reports the New York Times.


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