I'm a great cook, but I can't think of the last time I followed a recipe that was actually written in cursive. |
| Curious- do you all really print in block letters? I mean, cursive is just connecting the letters together. I have a hard time believing your letters don't touch and you print out each discretely. |
| I think it is because when you send someone a handwritten note, like a "Thank You" card or something, it looks nicer if your writing in cursive and your cursive is pretty. |
| I rarely write, block letters or cursive, anything on paper with a pen. I type. |
+1 and "yes" to both of OP's questions. Are there people who really don't know how to read or write cursive??? I'm 42 & write all my notes in cursive. It's much quicker (& prettier) than printing. |
| Ask a speech and language pathologist. There is a direct connection with the fluid motion of cursive and articulation disorders. |
| I teach Montessori preschool, and we teach cursive before printing because the flow of the letters is supposedly easier for the children to write. I am a huge Montessori fan but this is the only thing I disagree with. However, I do think that cursive should be taught to older children because it is a beautiful but dying art form. |
| Yes. |
| It's like saying knowing math facts by rote memory isn't important because of calculators. Think of a check, think of sll the "signature" versus "printed name" blocks on an annual basis (applications, tax returns, parental waivers, etc.) |
| I still write in cursive, but it helps that mine is neat... |
Cursive isn't just connecting the letters together. I connect the letters together when I print; that means I write connected print, not cursive. I think it's important to know how to read cursive, because there is still a lot of writing in cursive. It's not hard to learn how to read cursive, though. (And it would be a lot easier if there weren't all of those stupid letters in modern American cursive that look nothing like the printed letters.) |
+1 if my kids don't learn it at school, then they will learn it at home. |
| Just transcribed letters written in the 19th century. I have a difficult time with the script used then. My kids will never be able to read it. |
| I'm 36. I learned cursive, but never used it outside of school. I can sign my name. |