Cursive writing never out of style in Catholic schools

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elsker

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arkansas-catholic.org/news/article/4165/Cursive-writing-never-out-of-style-in-Catholic-schools

I nearly had a heart attack a few years ago when my daughter told me that cursive handwriting was not going to be taught to her in the 4th grade though she was taught how to read it in the 3rd grade. I remember being taught to read and write cursive in the 3rd grade and even though I never developed the beautiful handwriting that I envied in other people I knew I would never give up using it in favor of block printing. There is something warm and beautiful about receiving a handwritten card or letter. When written well cursive written notes take on an almost artistic quality. A grocery list written in a beautiful hand can be almost magical to behold. The swooping, curving letters almost dance on the page and the neatness of the writing says something about the author that goes beyond what is written. The author cares about not only their message but it’s delivery. The author is thoughtful and cares about how those thoughts are presented. The author is willing to sit and take the time to fashion their writing as a statement: choosing the right pen, the right paper, the right time and environment in which to write. You can get a quick note scrawled in sloppy print on the back of an envelope flung on your kitchen table or a beautifully presented letter carefully prepared and even if placed on your kitchen table has all the weight and importance of an invitation to a royal ball if just to ask how things are going or to share some news of the day. Either way there is a joy that come from sliding out folded sheets or a card on thick stock that fills the heart and soul when your eyes see the looping letters that form words that were written just for YOU!

The thought that my younger kids might one day open an old letter they’ve found and eye it with confusion the way kids today look at a rotary phone makes me sad and even if the schools no longer think it worth the time to teach the art of the handwritten word-I do! My husband sat down that day and made it his mission that our child wouldn’t be deprived the knowledge of this ancient way of penning a word. Just because our struggling school system decides to toss certain skills out the window doesn’t mean that we must agree. Even if we become a paperless society we mustn’t be so ready to label things obsolete or think that our kids cannot benefit from those things due to technology. Disregarding the past in favor of the future misses the point. The two can co-exist and when it suits people they do. Who would want wedding invitations written in block texts or sent in the form of text messages? No one! The hand written note may not be as ubiquitous as it once was but there is still a time and a place for it-unless we all give up on it entirely, which is something I’m not prepared to do just yet.

What do you think? Should schools bring back cursive or should schools that teach it abandon it entirely?
 
I understand why it is being abandoned. Keyboard skill are much more critical.
 
Im hoping the parents of all these kids have sense enough to teach their kids this skill at home if the schools are not going to teach it.

I agree, Keyboard skills are important right now, but thats no guarantee it will be the same in 30, 50 years…maybe by then, it will be something completely different?

Also, the argument could be made, why do kids even need to learn to write at all anymore, since computers, handheld devices are becoming so prevalent.
 
Grrr too bad I couldn’t correct the “J” in the title and Put the “H” instead grrrr! If this had been written on paper, I could have thrown it out started again haha
 
Im hoping the parents of all these kids have sense enough to teach their kids this skill at home if the schools are not going to teach it.

I agree, Keyboard skills are important right now, but thats no guarantee it will be the same in 30, 50 years…maybe by then, it will be something completely different?

Also, the argument could be made, why do kids even need to learn to write at all anymore, since computers, handheld devices are becoming so prevalent.
Because despite appearing on Saturday Night Live in the late 1900s, digital Post-it notes have yet to reach the mass market???:):):)🙂

ICXC NIKA
 
There is a joy in writing and receiving the hand written,sad but passing
 
One major reason I think it important for people to learn to write script is that they can then read it as opposed to decoding it.

It also develops certain aspects of hand-eye coordination.

And as a former military man told me, who knows what might happen to one’s electronic devices? One should always have a pen in one’s pocket. (As someone who went through several days with no electricity due to a weather emergency, I can relate :))

And really, who needs to teach someone keyboarding skills these days? I made sure my children learned to write by hand, they taught themselves how to type.

Wow, now that I think about, I taught myself to type too!
 
I think cursive should be taught just for note taking. It is quicker than print. I’ve tried typing out notes during a lecture, it didn’t sink in. I scribble quickly and it sticks. Maybe I’m just a weirdo.

Oh, and how do you sign your name if you can’t write in cursive? 🤷
 
I think cursive should be taught just for note taking. It is quicker than print. I’ve tried typing out notes during a lecture, it didn’t sink in. I scribble quickly and it sticks. Maybe I’m just a weirdo.

Oh, and how do you sign your name if you can’t write in cursive? 🤷
I have to hand write all my school notes in order to retain what’s in the lectures. What’s funny about the argument about keyboarding skills is a lot of young people fail typing tests for jobs that require 65 wpm while supposedly doing all their work on laptops. I was interviewing for a job and saw 20 somethings being turned away because they couldn’t meet even 55 wpm to interview. This was mind-blowing considering that generation grew up with the pc and laptop! So what does this leave? Pretty fast textting in truncated text speak??? EEEK! My gosh that’s almost illiteracy. IMHO
 
I understand why it is being abandoned. Keyboard skill are much more critical.
Unfortunately, computers and other equipment also fail.

I have a “love-hate” relationship, if you will, with technology. While I believe that technology can be useful as a servant, it is a terrible master.
 
I have to hand write all my school notes in order to retain what’s in the lectures. What’s funny about the argument about keyboarding skills is a lot of young people fail typing tests for jobs that require 65 wpm while supposedly doing all their work on laptops. I was interviewing for a job and saw 20 somethings being turned away because they couldn’t meet even 55 wpm to interview. This was mind-blowing considering that generation grew up with the pc and laptop! So what does this leave? Pretty fast textting in truncated text speak??? EEEK! My gosh that’s almost illiteracy. IMHO
So, they can’t write and they can’t type either!
 
This is no different than the abandonment of calligraphy in days of old. No one used it anymore so the norm was switched to cursive. Now cursive is no longer as needed so they are beginning the switch to only print. When a child has to learn two writing styles already (printing and efficient typing) then something else not as needed has to go.

I see nothing wrong with it. It’s just a writing style. And how many kids even write anymore? 🤷
 
arkansas-catholic.org/news/article/4165/Cursive-writing-never-out-of-style-in-Catholic-schools

I nearly had a heart attack a few years ago when my daughter told me that cursive handwriting was not going to be taught to her in the 4th grade though she was taught how to read it in the 3rd grade. I remember being taught to read and write cursive in the 3rd grade and even though I never developed the beautiful handwriting that I envied in other people I knew I would never give up using it in favor of block printing. There is something warm and beautiful about receiving a handwritten card or letter. When written well cursive written notes take on an almost artistic quality. A grocery list written in a beautiful hand can be almost magical to behold. The swooping, curving letters almost dance on the page and the neatness of the writing says something about the author that goes beyond what is written. The author cares about not only their message but it’s delivery. The author is thoughtful and cares about how those thoughts are presented. The author is willing to sit and take the time to fashion their writing as a statement: choosing the right pen, the right paper, the right time and environment in which to write. You can get a quick note scrawled in sloppy print on the back of an envelope flung on your kitchen table or a beautifully presented letter carefully prepared and even if placed on your kitchen table has all the weight and importance of an invitation to a royal ball if just to ask how things are going or to share some news of the day. Either way there is a joy that come from sliding out folded sheets or a card on thick stock that fills the heart and soul when your eyes see the looping letters that form words that were written just for YOU!

The thought that my younger kids might one day open an old letter they’ve found and eye it with confusion the way kids today look at a rotary phone makes me sad and even if the schools no longer think it worth the time to teach the art of the handwritten word-I do! My husband sat down that day and made it his mission that our child wouldn’t be deprived the knowledge of this ancient way of penning a word. Just because our struggling school system decides to toss certain skills out the window doesn’t mean that we must agree. Even if we become a paperless society we mustn’t be so ready to label things obsolete or think that our kids cannot benefit from those things due to technology. Disregarding the past in favor of the future misses the point. The two can co-exist and when it suits people they do. Who would want wedding invitations written in block texts or sent in the form of text messages? No one! The hand written note may not be as ubiquitous as it once was but there is still a time and a place for it-unless we all give up on it entirely, which is something I’m not prepared to do just yet.

What do you think? Should schools bring back cursive or should schools that teach it abandon it entirely?
I agree with you, they should have never stopped teaching it. Who in the world comes up with these crazy ideas that effect our children so drasticlly?? . It should be taught and once learned it will last a lifetime. I am teaching my youngest grandaughter cursive writing. She loves it. God Bless, Memaw
 
This is no different than the abandonment of calligraphy in days of old. No one used it anymore so the norm was switched to cursive. Now cursive is no longer as needed so they are beginning the switch to only print. When a child has to learn two writing styles already (printing and efficient typing) then something else not as needed has to go.

I see nothing wrong with it. It’s just a writing style. And how many kids even write anymore? 🤷
My print is second only to horse rubbish. My script is only slightly better, but when I have to write a quick list or draw out a check or something, it is much easier (to me) to use script (or rather, scribble) rather than print. Besides I actually enjoy signing my name, even on a computer printed document. There is something of a personal touch to it (and no, I am not one of those touchy feely, you know what I mean, Precious Moments kind of individual).
 
Handwriting is so personal. It’s an extension of the person. It should be valued.
Who cares if typing or keyboarding is prevalent?
Why is that the deciding factor?
I hope cursive continues. The kids who print their homework write the bare minimum because it’s fairly tiring. I agree with Kendra; if you’re taking notes, cursive is quicker.
 
This is no different than the abandonment of calligraphy in days of old. No one used it anymore so the norm was switched to cursive. Now cursive is no longer as needed so they are beginning the switch to only print. When a child has to learn two writing styles already (printing and efficient typing) then something else not as needed has to go.

I see nothing wrong with it. It’s just a writing style. And how many kids even write anymore? 🤷
You are right, things come and go fairly quickly, I think even at some point, there wont be a need for typing anymore, (name removed by moderator)ut will be done thru another advanced method.

Its kind of funny if you think about it, computers today are so powerful and advanced, but still using the basic keyboard, same as computers back in the early 90s! I know there are speech to text programs that utilize a microphone, but strange that no one has come up with anything more advanced to replace the keyboard yet.
 
Handwriting is so personal. It’s an extension of the person. It should be valued.
Who cares if typing or keyboarding is prevalent?
Why is that the deciding factor?
I hope cursive continues. The kids who print their homework write the bare minimum because it’s fairly tiring. I agree with Kendra; if you’re taking notes, cursive is quicker.
👍

Can’t they even analyze personalities via handwriting? If I have to retain something, I will write it out - sometimes even more than once so it sticks because typing just doesn’t do it for me. I am a Catholic school survivor and still sneeze when I think of the chalk dust. 🙂
 
Someone had to bring this up! I have not so fond memories of learning the Palmer Penmanship Method at the end of a ruler and/or the knob on her “clicker” wielded by a Sister of Notre Dame back in St. Mary’s elementary school. As one could expect, I rebelled against the teaching method and as soon as I was out of school my penmanship to a header.
 
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