Anonymous wrote:Cursive is still taught in Catholic schools.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, they need to teach writing skills, whether cursive or just decent printing, so that you don't have more 26 year olds who write like this. What an embarrassment for someone that old. This looks like my 10 year old's handwriting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What on earth for?
To read the Constitution.
Anonymous wrote:Education cannot be the same as when we were kids. The world is not the same as when we were kids. The job market is not the same as when we were kids. All of these kids need to learn how to type, which, by the way, is also fine motor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What on earth for?
To read the Constitution.
Is it only available in cursive?
DP. Would you rather read something with your own skills or through another person's lens? If you read it yourself then you know what you've read is exactly what is written. If you read something that is translated then you are reading something that has another person's inferences and biases.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What on earth for?
To read the Constitution.
Is it only available in cursive?
Anonymous wrote:Yes, they need to teach writing skills, whether cursive or just decent printing, so that you don't have more 26 year olds who write like this. What an embarrassment for someone that old. This looks like my 10 year old's handwriting.
Anonymous wrote:Re: APS teaches cursive. In my experience, not true. They pretend to teach cursive, in that it's on the curriculum list. But they don't actually meaningfully teach it so that kids might learn it. I have three kids who are now MS/HS, and none learned cursive in APS. I wish I had taught them. You can learn to type later, but motor control handwriting is much more important at a young age. I see the negative effects now as they struggle to take notes, etc.
Anonymous wrote:RUSSIAN TROLL ALERT
Seriously the republicans have hired Russian trolls to post about CRT everywhere.
Anonymous wrote:Teacher here. Fine motor coordination in middle grades is very lacking. My new 3rd and 4th graders have kindergarten penmanship and coloring skills. A small handful of very mindful students are writing legibly and fewer still writing legibly and quickly. For all the "typing is also fine motor" people, we just spent over a year doing that and now parents want us off screens in the classroom.