Anonymous wrote:Hilarious to see these parents justifying elimination of teaching a useful skill. The public school vs private school kids will be obvious in one more way...who can properly handwrite a thank you note. Love it.
Anonymous wrote:How many of you all use cursive in your everyday life? I'm in my 30s and cannot remember the last time I had to write something in cursive aside from my signature on a receipt. I was in MCPS ES 20+ years ago and they made us write in cursive because "all your middle and high school teachers will expect this and you'll need it later in life." No, they didn't, and no, I didn't. MCPS has a lot of problems but I don't see this as one of them.
Anonymous wrote:
Handwritten notes look nicer in cursive than print. Print seems low class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 5th grade daughter has gorgeous handwriting. When she signs her name, it gives me such joy. Sad that most parents will never experience this.
My son has terrible handwriting, as do I. Every day I give thanks for modern computing which means that he won't have to spend time trying to perfect handwriting when it's not useful in the adult world.
So.....you never write personal notes? Your kid will never write a letter? Not even a note?
Huh? Not learning to write cursive doesn’t mean you don’t learn how to use a pen and paper. It just means you print your notes. But yes, except for thank you notes and shopping lists I type pretty much everything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 5th grade daughter has gorgeous handwriting. When she signs her name, it gives me such joy. Sad that most parents will never experience this.
My son has terrible handwriting, as do I. Every day I give thanks for modern computing which means that he won't have to spend time trying to perfect handwriting when it's not useful in the adult world.
So.....you never write personal notes? Your kid will never write a letter? Not even a note?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How many of you all use cursive in your everyday life? I'm in my 30s and cannot remember the last time I had to write something in cursive aside from my signature on a receipt. I was in MCPS ES 20+ years ago and they made us write in cursive because "all your middle and high school teachers will expect this and you'll need it later in life." No, they didn't, and no, I didn't. MCPS has a lot of problems but I don't see this as one of them.
If I need to write a sizeable amount or am concerned about speed, I write in cursive because it's so much more efficient. It's better for note-taking. Last month I went to a conference and spent two days writing in cursive. If they only use it for note-taking, I think it would still be enormously valuable (unless you prefer to teach them shorthand).
My daughter also found that by the time she got to high school, she wasn't able to finish her tests because printing the answers to essay questions took too long. While the teachers accepted printing, they certainly didn't allow extra time for it.
Anonymous wrote:It is stupid. Cursive is easier than printing. There are a number of studies linking learning with writing. The upside is that you and your spouse have a secret language. Just write things in proper cursive and your kids will be clueless.
Anonymous wrote:How many of you all use cursive in your everyday life? I'm in my 30s and cannot remember the last time I had to write something in cursive aside from my signature on a receipt. I was in MCPS ES 20+ years ago and they made us write in cursive because "all your middle and high school teachers will expect this and you'll need it later in life." No, they didn't, and no, I didn't. MCPS has a lot of problems but I don't see this as one of them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it totally gone now? Reason I ask is how do kids learn to sign their name? Do they just print it now?
In MCPS, many kids learn cursive in a limited way in 3rd/4th grade. My kids' signatures are a mixture of print and cursive.
Anonymous wrote:My 5th grade daughter has gorgeous handwriting. When she signs her name, it gives me such joy. Sad that most parents will never experience this.