Anonymous wrote:Thank you! Teach it and require it! It's FCPS 3rd grade curriculum. One of mine got it and the other didn't. It's not about AAP vs gen ed. Please write a thank you note and use cursive, young mothers. Teach your kids as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have never used cursive except to sign my name. Such a waste. Everything is electronic. Time to get with the times
You never send handwritten letters ever? I write in cursive every day. I take notes at work, write thank you notes, send birthday cards etc. I also read cursive every day. This is just a basic life skill. Can't believe some schools are not teaching this. My kids are learning it in school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I didn't know kids don't learn how to write cursive in this country! The other day there was a word in cursive, something like "he" and my k student child said d: "what is this? This is not a word!"
Anyway, we are moving to another country for 6 months and over there she will learn cursive writing first.
Children around the world learn to write in cursive, FFX County AAP kids (at least a few years ago) were taught cursive, and our private school friends all write in cursive. We hired a tutor to teach our (non-AAP) DS cursive. He seemed to be the only group not learning it at the time.
Anonymous wrote:I didn't know kids don't learn how to write cursive in this country! The other day there was a word in cursive, something like "he" and my k student child said d: "what is this? This is not a word!"
Anyway, we are moving to another country for 6 months and over there she will learn cursive writing first.
Anonymous wrote:I have never used cursive except to sign my name. Such a waste. Everything is electronic. Time to get with the times
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, because many people write more legibly in cursive than print.
I teach AP English, and students will need to write three separate compositions by hand for part of the exam; the composition portion is worth 55% of the exam grade. I give them a practice composition each week "under test conditions" (ie, timed writing by hand on paper), and I am APPALLED at how illegible some of their writing is for this. If the AP Reader (who scores the tests externally) can't read their writing, they aren't going to get a very good score, even if they are brilliant and their composition is well-constructed. I have found myself teaching high school students how to form certain letters so that I (and the person who scores their exam in May) can read their writing. IB English also requires two handwritten composition exams, both of which are scored externally.
I do feel for the hs English teachers. Handwriting is atrocious. How is it that my grandma who only went to 8th grade in the Depression has better handwriting than 99% of students?
I wonder this as well. Why is handwriting so bad these days? How did other kids learn handwriting before? Both printing and cursive.
Anonymous wrote:
I do feel for the hs English teachers. Handwriting is atrocious. How is it that my grandma who only went to 8th grade in the Depression has better handwriting than 99% of students?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes.
New research shows an intriguing link between the act of taking notes in cursive in class and better memorization, compared to typing notes, and *even* compared to writing notes in block writing.
citation?
NP. Here are a couple. I'm not the one who wrote what you are questioning so probably they have other citations.
http://www.psychologicalscience.org/index.php/news/releases/take-notes-by-hand-for-better-long-term-comprehension.html
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/next/body/taking-notes-by-hand-could-improve-memory-wt/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes.
New research shows an intriguing link between the act of taking notes in cursive in class and better memorization, compared to typing notes, and *even* compared to writing notes in block writing.
citation?
NP. Here are a couple. I'm not the one who wrote what you are questioning so probably they have other citations.
http://www.psychologicalscience.org/index.php/news/releases/take-notes-by-hand-for-better-long-term-comprehension.html
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/next/body/taking-notes-by-hand-could-improve-memory-wt/