I know the title could be more creative, but I'm feeling frustrated with life in general so that's the best you're going to get.
Chapter 3 from The War Against Grammar by David Mulroy was a history lesson much like its previous chapter. However, I won't try to draw any deep meaning from it since I was way off last time. And the time before that and so on. You can see the pattern. My interpretting skills are shot to hell. Mulroy is more a mystery to me than he ever was.
Anyway, the assignment was to create two questions pertaining to this chapter. One that had a straightforward answer in the text and the second a question that was more thought provoking.
1) What period of time was grammar viewed as the essential academic discipline on which all others are based?
2) Is the growing number of students in universities contributing to the fall of grammar, or is it false to even say that there is a decline in grammar since grammar can never trully be removed from society?