Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of you confuse cursive with calligraphy.
Cursive is still often used overseas, so if your children aspire to learn foreign languages, they'll need the skill to be able to decipher it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, it should. Brain to hand connections are important in our development as thinkers.
+1000
Also those who write notes by hand tend to remember and synthesize them better than those who use a keyboard. And writing in cursive is easier and fast than printing.
That is not universally true. I know a lot of people (including me) who write exclusively in print, quickly.
This may be because you were never required to extensively write in cursive. Often if schools teach it nowadays they only teach it in 3rd grade and never require the students to use it again. When I was in school, we were required to use cursive all through high school.
Cursive is easier to teach and with proficiency in cursive is much faster than print since the pencil does not have to be lifted off the paper as much as with print. Many occupational therapists also recommend cursive for those with dysgraphia since it is easier to learn. Also, in the early 1900s cursive was taught first starting from kindergarten. This would help a lot with getting students proficient in cursive.
Another drawback to not teaching cursive is that many art teachers find that students do not have the fine motor skills to draw well as much anymore. I also believe that learning the skill of cursive helps students to learn how to focus and gives them a sense of accomplishment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work in an office with 20 and 30 year-olds from around the world (India, China, etc.) all with very different backgrounds. They all learned to write English in cursive. I was very embarrassed for one of our 28 year old managers who couldn't read notes from one of them and had to make a joke about it in a meeting. She was pegged as an American public school graduate who couldn't read something the rest of the room could. I think not knowing cursive limits you and is just ONE more thing being taken out of our schools while the rest of the world marches on.
I'm a bit baffled by people who can't read any cursive (except for the goofy capital letters, which are just dumb in standard American classroom cursive. I don't know what cursive people learn in Indian or Chinese schools). But ok, schools can take a week or so, maybe in third or fourth grade, to go over reading American cursive. How about that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, it should. Brain to hand connections are important in our development as thinkers.
+1000
Also those who write notes by hand tend to remember and synthesize them better than those who use a keyboard. And writing in cursive is easier and fast than printing.
That is not universally true. I know a lot of people (including me) who write exclusively in print, quickly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's nicer than a cursive signature?
The alternative is writing in print letters, which just doesn't seem very elegant or professional on paper.
Here's a question: why have (mostly public school) educators become so intimidated by teaching cursive?
They are intimidated to fit everything in. We are asking teachers these days to teach all these 21st century skills along with typing and everything else we used to teach our kids. They just can't fit it all in during the school year anymore so something needs to get dropped to fit in these new things.
Anonymous wrote:What's nicer than a cursive signature?
The alternative is writing in print letters, which just doesn't seem very elegant or professional on paper.
Here's a question: why have (mostly public school) educators become so intimidated by teaching cursive?
Anonymous wrote:Every once in a while, I'll see someone share nonsense on Facebook about "share/like if you think cursive should still be taught in schools!"
And the comments are almost universally from Methuselah's posse, "of course! kids have gotten so lazy using computers!"
So give me a valid reason for the existence of cursive for kids entering the workforce 15 years from now. Is it just to sign your name?
Anonymous wrote:What's nicer than a cursive signature?
The alternative is writing in print letters, which just doesn't seem very elegant or professional on paper.
Here's a question: why have (mostly public school) educators become so intimidated by teaching cursive?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, it should. Brain to hand connections are important in our development as thinkers.
+1000
Also those who write notes by hand tend to remember and synthesize them better than those who use a keyboard. And writing in cursive is easier and fast than printing.