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The handwriting is on the wall; cursive is no longer welcome in elementary schools
By: Dennis SNov. 28th, 2012more from Dennis S
I doubt my wife’s penmanship sealed the deal when it came to asking for her hand in marriage, but her flowing, graceful handwritten lines from pen to paper did tell me that I was proposing to a sweet, creative and intelligent young lady. In receiving the most welcome ‘yes’ of my life, it was apparent that she had not had a chance to closely examine my cursive efforts. Though I consider myself at least moderately creative, my handwriting is downright pedestrian, if that. It has a chunky, oversized quality about it; legible, but not in the least, interesting.
But it’s me, an integral part of who I am. Just as my wife’s wonderful efforts help to define who she is. And the distinct writing of each of the kids does the same. But there’s a move afoot to take all that away. Curse cursive is the watchword of a segment of the government and educational community that insists that teaching cursive is no longer a necessity and, in fact, a waste of good classroom time. Cursive may not be taught in your school any longer. It used to be virtually universal for 2nd and 3rd graders. No more.
The push to eliminate the teaching of cursive writing has been going on for a number of years, largely unnoticed and under-reported by the nation’s media. President Obama and his Education Department have been front and center in escorting this once indispensable discipline out the back door of our elementary schools. It’s all part of something called “Common Core State Standards”, a brainchild of the American Diploma Project.
The ADP, now a subsidiary of ‘Achieve’, was created in 1996 by the National Governors Association and (wink, wink, nudge, nudge) ‘business leaders’ to establish educational standards. One of the major consultants to APD is CV-heavy, William Craig Rice. Rice consults numerous organizations, academia and think tanks and served as a fellow to the awesomely right-wing American Enterprise Institute with its direct ties to the radical neocon Project for the New American Century.
I’m not automatically opposed to initiatives favored by the radical right, but such support always raises my suspicions. Anytime I start sniffing out the participation in any issue that includes the far right, especially a right associated with the most radical or the radicals, I hesitate.
The purpose of CCSS, as stated, is to “Provide a consistent, clear understanding of what students are expected to learn, so teachers and parents know what they need to do to help them.” The Core Standards program no longer requires cursive to be part of the state educational curricula.
To sweeten the pot and encourage state participation in CCSS, the Obama administration came up with something called ‘Race to the Top’ with federal grants dangled in front of State Education Departments. Only 5 states refused the bait. In 2014 states will officially decide on adopting national curriculum standards that do not include cursive in the teaching of English and math.
There’s no question that we have educationally plunged full bore into the electronic age. My wife, who teaches Special Education (Emotional Disabilities) in Middle School, utilizes some of the most advanced hardware and software available in the educational sphere.
From a practical standpoint, teaching cursive is most certainly old school. There are few one-on-one interfaces between teacher and student these days without an accompanying electronic element. My wife relies on a stunningly advanced system called Promethean World. It’s a fascinating and effective learning tool. It features futuristic interactive displays that weave their way perfectly into the daily out-of-school student experiences with all manner of computers, touchpads and 4G and Smartphones, among other space-age toys and gadgets. Promethean Learner Response Systems, software, Interactive resources and other devices would leave Isaac Asimov breathless.
I get all that. I also get that block printing only would be a boon to long-suffering postmen who have to figure out scribbled addresses that would challenge a cryptographer. Pharmacists would be giant fans as well after years of deciphering prescription cursive from the doctors. Yes, cursive is, for the most part, harder to figure out than the printed word. On the other hand, writing my 14-letter full name in cursive takes all of 4 ½ second; printed, I burn up the better part of 7 seconds. So cursive is quicker and much smoother with pen or pencil to paper throughout. It extended the life of many a quill pen back in the day.
Many teachers will tell you that cursive is good for young students. It aids in coordination and nudges the brain. All the positives notwithstanding, I suspect 2014 will bring about an official end to the teaching of cursive in most schools; yet another benefit denied by the ‘cut services’ crowd of Neanderthals. At the same time, ‘business leaders’ most likely from the major textbook companies, will figure out a way to sell those American households who will teach the subject at home any number of pricey educational devices to one-subject home school your little ones with. All the better to sell to many millions as opposed to the limited elementary school pool.
So in a couple of years, most schools will say farewell to this useless relic of the past, hardly worth an educator’s time and energy. The path will then be paved for the serious intellectual scholarship of Intelligent Design, creationism and climate denial.
Regards,
Dennis S.
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Maranon
Nov. 28th, 2012 at 10:06 pm
We are loading our students with electronic equipment and they learn how to push the buttons. With music and arts gone we are missing the opportunity for providing a critical thinking skills.
Sometime back we stopped using the slide rule use, and the students began to fail to figure out certain problems. Some institutions are teaching it use again.
Curse the cursive cutters!
t helps to create critical thinking
Sue
Nov. 28th, 2012 at 10:21 pm
As an educator of 20 years, cursive penmanship was a removed requirement in the 90s, just as dramatic play, nap time And rest time out kindergarten all due to NCLB. Let us be clear this is not an Obama phenomenon but overkill of looking as test data. As an old school teacher, we had the four “Rs,” reading, ‘riting, ‘rithematic and the arts that were skewed after the EASA reinstatment laws that were enacted beginning with former President Bush. Now, we are teaching students to non-thinkers, uncreative and robotic. We are in so deep, that I do not believe any President can fix this mess caused by high stakes test taking.
My two-cents.
Rho
Nov. 28th, 2012 at 10:23 pm
When I was a 2nd grader, I would have loved such an idea, because my penmanship was then, and still is, pretty lousy. I had not inherited my mother’s talent for lovely script, but instead my father’s more practical, blocky lettering. 20 years later, I marry a man that was trained in commmercial art and calligraphy, and it opened me up to so many styles and fonts of letters I never knew existed. Beautiful writing needs to stay.
Sally
Nov. 28th, 2012 at 10:38 pm
I worry about everything artistic. You can draw and paint now with your hands or a stylus. Will we soon eliminate art teachers and insterad use some program for drawing? The aesthetics of brush to paint and then to paper are sensory pelasures. Our grandkids will miss out on all of that. And how will the GOP manage to identify people without a signature? My signature is on my driver’s license and my passport. Will these students never have a unique signature? This is as wrong as when my district stopped teaching spelling after 5th grade. Nonsense. And they wonder why we have so few National Merit scholars and AP scholars in a rich town that is home to a major chemical company where most citizens have a bachelor’s degree or more.
marilyn logiudice
Nov. 28th, 2012 at 10:51 pm
Its sad that the old is becoming something people have no use for. I love to write and treasured my penmanship classes as a kid.Technology is fantastic,but to to write using different methods,calligraphy,fonts,etc.is a gift to me.I have a great handwriting-not my ego, but something I put a lot of practice into.It’s grt to press buttons,but I truly believe there is nothing wrg with learning something the old way before you learn the new way.The more knowledge a person has the smarter you are.Don’t let things become extinct.There is so much beauty and art in writing.
Rachel
Nov. 28th, 2012 at 10:52 pm
I have never understood why cursive was necessary to learn. I absolutely hated the way it looked as a child, and never could quite figure out why it was so important. It has no practical use and belongs as an art and not as something that has to be taught as a core curriculum.
I will say that I also hated art classes and gravitated much more towards literature and music, so maybe my disdain for cursive is connected with my dislike of visual art classes.
If cursive should exist as an art form, then there should be calligraphy classes as electives. Most cursive I’ve seen in life is nothing short of chicken scratch and is in no way beautiful, so saying it’s an art form is laughable to me.
Shiva (Moderator)
Nov. 28th, 2012 at 10:56 pm
I think we all have areas we enjoy and hate. Thank gods that computers came along for me and math.
I think where schools go wrong is when kids are a certain age they should be sent towards what they will be good at. Science, math, the arts etc. They shouldnt have to learn everything that wont benefit them later
Kate Gladstone
Nov. 28th, 2012 at 11:32 pm
Research shows: the fastest, most legible writers shun cursive. They join some letters, not all: making the easiest joins, skipping the rest, using print-like shapes for letters whose cursive and printed shapes disagree.
(Citations:
www.jstor.org/stable/pdfp...
and www.jstor.org/stable/pdfp... )
Claims that cursive makes you smarter rely on misquoted/misrepresented reports. The research shows that the benefits ascribed to cursive are in _all_ handwriting styles.
Reading cursive still matters — it takes just 30-60 minutes to learn, and can be taught to 5- or 6-year-olds. Needing to read cursive is therefore no mandate for writing it.
Further: cursive signatures have no special validity over other signatures. (Don’t take my word: ask any attorney.)
Of course, some folks claim that cursive has magic powers not shared by any other handwriting. Without exception, the research they cite (when they bother to give actual citations at all) turns out out to be misquoted or misrepresented. Read the actual studies: you’ll see that the mental benefits ascribed to cursive are in _all_ styles of handwriting. They are not limited to cursive. (will leave it to the misquoters and their disciples to ponder why the misquoting is done.)
Yours for better letters,
Kate Gladstone
Handwriting Repair/Handwriting That Works
and the World Handwriting Contest
www.HandwritingThatWorks....
AZZIZA
Nov. 29th, 2012 at 12:10 am
Why do we need to take everything away..the old ways have been tryed and tested they work !!!Our children have fallen behind and I really believe it is because we have aloud our selve to rely on the computer too much…let take on some new but the things that works academically we need to keep in place!!
Hrafnkell Haraldsson
Nov. 29th, 2012 at 6:47 am
My second-grader can’t read cursive. He hasn’t been introduced to it excerpt for a book we bought for him at Barnes and Noble sohe could practice at home (at his own request).
Reynardine
Nov. 29th, 2012 at 8:59 am
Handwriting may come, handwriting may go, but in Florida, we’ll always be Palmers.
Roboz
Nov. 29th, 2012 at 9:41 am
Well, I haven’t written in cursive since I left high school over 30 years ago and in college I printed all my notes. Maybe being a lefty had something to do with that (if you’re a lefty you understand). In our technological age there’s not much use for it except for your signature and, apparently (according to Kate, above) you don’t even need it for that. I do envy others nice cursive handwriting abilities though. I still handwrite letters to my aging uncle who refuses to even own a phone, let alone a computer. I think it should still be taught in elementary school with a low-bar pass/fail for legibility. Maybe also taught in art class?
Thomas Quinlan
Nov. 29th, 2012 at 11:59 am
The use of written language is exploding. And all of that written language is produced by keyboards on networked digital devices. In the workplace, many people spend 100% of their time on a PC keyboard. People type, alot.
Why teach children a skill they ultimately will not use?
ibwilliamsi
Nov. 29th, 2012 at 9:01 pm
It strengthens the muscles of the hands that aren’t used in a keyboard. It’s easier to write a quick note on paper with a pencil. When the power goes out and your battery dies, it’s handy to know how to write. Typing is not writing, and knowing how to type is not the same as knowing how to write.
Dancertiffy
Nov. 29th, 2012 at 12:09 pm
What happens if we deplete the world’s resources used for making the batteries for all of these devices?
By the time that happens people will have long forgotten the lost art of writing with a pen, and so there we will all be: Mute and looking for batteries.
Reynardine
Nov. 29th, 2012 at 11:47 pm
Kids should learn to read cursive early, but they should not be intensively drilled in writing it or required to pass a course in it till at least sixth grade. Sometimes hand-eye co-ordination is developed late in childhood, and too early pressure can cause dysgraphia. Properly learned, however, good handwriting is a pleasure that should not be foregone, and an indespensible aid to journal-keeping, especially when a hurricane or blizzard makes the power go out.
Sharon McCann
Nov. 30th, 2012 at 9:28 am
Cursive is gone from the schools of my children. and suddenly we find ourselves with a predicament no one seems to have noticed as a problem.
They cannot sign their own names.
No signature means what? Are we back to x’s on the signature line? Some remain convinced that finger print IDs will be so commonplace it will not matter, but for right now we need to sign or names and they cannot. I am teaching them cursive at home.
They cannot write cursive and they cannot read it. The constitution is difficult for a modern reader. Without understanding cursive they will not be able to read it at all. It may be old fashioned and little used but where it is used it is quite necessary.