Don’t assume, instructors tell students.
That’s a good rule for this instructor, too. Every day some of my assumptions turn out to be invalid.
Recently, for example, I had a conversation with a university-educated person about a piece of writing that mentioned the name Hansard.
She complained that the item did not give Hansard’s first name.
Not a problem, I thought. Because my ill-spent youth included a few years as a political journalist, I was familiar with Hansard.
It’s the official record of debates in the parliaments and legislatures of countries with a British parliamentary tradition such as Canada.
I assumed that, because I am familiar with Hansard, many other people are. Wrong, and unfair, too.
My conversational partner is a fine person who knows a lot more about many topics than I do. She just hasn’t spent much time reading Hansard.
And I shouldn’t have assumed that she had.
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