Anonymous wrote:no
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i would. develop both sides of the brain. worked out beautifully for my brother who writes righty and plays (sports) lefty. excelled in both.
+1
Ambidextrous people are smarter.
I doubt it but if that were true then left handed people would be smarter. Most lefties are ambidextrous by necessity. My great grandmother, grandmother, mother, me and my 2 dd are all left handed. Also my two sisters. All the females.
Left handedness IS correlated with intellectual giftedness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i would. develop both sides of the brain. worked out beautifully for my brother who writes righty and plays (sports) lefty. excelled in both.
+1
Ambidextrous people are smarter.
I doubt it but if that were true then left handed people would be smarter. Most lefties are ambidextrous by necessity. My great grandmother, grandmother, mother, me and my 2 dd are all left handed. Also my two sisters. All the females.
Left handedness IS correlated with intellectual giftedness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i would. develop both sides of the brain. worked out beautifully for my brother who writes righty and plays (sports) lefty. excelled in both.
+1
Ambidextrous people are smarter.
I doubt it but if that were true then left handed people would be smarter. Most lefties are ambidextrous by necessity. My great grandmother, grandmother, mother, me and my 2 dd are all left handed. Also my two sisters. All the females.
Left handedness IS correlated with intellectual giftedness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i would. develop both sides of the brain. worked out beautifully for my brother who writes righty and plays (sports) lefty. excelled in both.
+1
Ambidextrous people are smarter.
I doubt it but if that were true then left handed people would be smarter. Most lefties are ambidextrous by necessity. My great grandmother, grandmother, mother, me and my 2 dd are all left handed. Also my two sisters. All the females.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Happy leftie here, age 54.
I’m the only leftie in my family of origin. I didn’t attend a preschool so learned to use scissors with “regular” scissors. Never could use the special green-handled leftie scissors.
I struggled mightily with cursive handwriting - actually failed it in grade 3 and always got marked down for messy (smudgy), crumpled submitted work since I was dragging my little hand all over my paper!
I can very easily write on a large board with my right hand
That’s interesting. In learning cursive we would copy sentences and the the teacher would ask left handed people to raise their hand. The teacher would come by and make a mark on the left handed student’s paper. This way they understood the smudges and whatever else differentiated the left vs right handed writing.
Anonymous wrote:Happy leftie here, age 54.
I’m the only leftie in my family of origin. I didn’t attend a preschool so learned to use scissors with “regular” scissors. Never could use the special green-handled leftie scissors.
I struggled mightily with cursive handwriting - actually failed it in grade 3 and always got marked down for messy (smudgy), crumpled submitted work since I was dragging my little hand all over my paper!
I can very easily write on a large board with my right hand
Anonymous wrote:First of all, I am a left hander so don’t flame me as ignorant.
Handedness is really a continuum according to most scientific research. I use my left hand for dexterity and my right hand for strength, my son uses his left hand for dexterity and strength.
My experience is that most right handers are pretty firmly on the far right handedness end of the continuum and lefties can vary a bit more on “how” left handed they are (this is anecdotal, but I do know quite a few lefties that are somewhere more toward the middle and I do not know any righties that are anything but at the far end).
If your daughter looks comfortable with her hand choice, let it be. There is nothing wrong with being left handed. If she seems to be inconsistent, invite (don’t force) her to explore her options so she can figure out what works best for her.
Anonymous wrote:Happy leftie here, age 54.
I’m the only leftie in my family of origin. I didn’t attend a preschool so learned to use scissors with “regular” scissors. Never could use the special green-handled leftie scissors.
I struggled mightily with cursive handwriting - actually failed it in grade 3 and always got marked down for messy (smudgy), crumpled submitted work since I was dragging my little hand all over my paper!
Interestingly, I am mostly ambidextrous, except for handwriting EXCEPT - I found out I can write on a large whiteboard easily, but it’s a totally different handwriting style!
I’m not athletic but have tried golf and tennis and instinctively hold right. I’m right-footed/dominant. I broke my right ankle and this was challenging.
I use hand tools (mixers, hammers, paint brushes, etc.) only with my right hand.
By the way, I have gorgeous penmanship - cursive and print and I absolutely love to hand write letters, take notes, etc. I’m often asked if
I’m an architect (I’m not!) because my handwriting is so perfect. Also, I hand-addressed my own wedding invitations because why pay for a calligrapher? For fun, I’ve hand addressed friends’ invitations and did a seating chart display.
I can very easily write on a large board with my right hand