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Have You Experienced the Curse of Cursive Handwriting

By Rosemary Cass July 23, 2024 Lifestyle

If you’re of a certain age, perhaps you learned cursive writing, also known as script, a way of writing that’s almost extinct. It’s not being taught in most schools anymore, something I find disappointing. I love my cursive writing because I find it so much faster.

When I have to fill out forms that instruct me to “please print neatly” I find it slow and tedious. I know I could write it out very clearly and much faster – my handwriting is quite nice, the result of a parochial school education and hours of practicing the Palmer method.

What Is Cursive Writing?

Perhaps you don’t even know what cursive writing is? It’s a style of penmanship that joins the letters together so that one writes in a continuous, flowing way, not lifting the pen from the paper after each letter. It’s very functional, used for ordinary daily writing as well as in calligraphy.

When I was a child, it was the universal way one wrote. In school, we spent hours practicing the Palmer method, making continuous circles that looked like a long slinky, or continuous spike-like strokes that looked like an EKG. We were taught to move our arm from the elbow to the fingertips, in a gliding motion, rather than just the hand. It was fun!

I never thought of cursive writing as anything special. It was just the way I wrote, as did all my peers. And it never occurred to me that discontinuing it would have ramifications – but it does!

If You Can’t Write It, You Can’t Read It

For one thing, if you never learn how to write cursive, you can’t read it! I found this out when I left my grandson a note one day when I went out – “Gone to the store. Back soon.”

When I got home, he asked me where I had gone, and I said, “Didn’t you see my note?”, to which he replied, “I did, Granny, but I don’t know how to read cursive.” I knew it wasn’t being taught anymore, but it never occurred to me that this meant young people couldn’t read it.

Historical Documents

So, where does that leave the Declaration of Independence? When Thomas Jefferson drafted the document before the American colonies declared their independence from Great Britain, he joined most but not all the letters.

However, a few days later, it was rewritten in the fully joined, “proper” cursive style we see on display now. Think of John Hancock’s beautiful large scroll, written large and first so that Britain’s King George could “read it without spectacles.” Would it be the same in printed block letters???

What About Signatures?

Which brings up signatures. For generations, our signature has been an indicator of our authenticity, analyzed by handwriting experts to determine if it’s genuine. Can you do that with print?

Often, we’re asked to sign below and print our name beneath it. Is a printed signature legal? Can experts tell if it’s genuine? My research tells me that not only are printed signatures legal, but even something like a smiley face can be! Good grief! Remember when illiterate people made their X?

Apparently, cursive is making a return to school curriculums in the United States. One of the things holding it up is the lack of teachers who know it and know how to teach it.

Handwriting in all forms will probably disappear completely someday, now that we’ve entered the era of typing on a computer or pecking out messages in texts. But personally, I hope that cursive returns.

Let’s Have a Conversation:

How do you feel about it? Is it being taught in your school districts? Can your children and grandchildren read cursive? Can you share a story where your handwritten note could not be deciphered? Let have a laugh together!

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Carol

The Classics and Literature studies in universities is dropping numbers because students cannot read the original texts. What is the world coming to??

jmsl910

numbers?

Sue Schwiebert

Cursive handwriting IS being taught in 2nd, 3rd, and 4th grade, at least it is in Eau Claire, Wisconsin. Overgeneralized comments on social media like, “what a shame cursive is not being taught in schools,” make my heart ache. After more than 35 years as a 3rd and 4th grade teacher, I also taught keyboarding, printing, computer literacy, phonics, spelling, reading comprehension, and, and, and to my precious students. I did this all while filling out yearlong forms on 22 domains to submit to the state to prove I was a competent (outstanding) teacher. I retired early because it hurt too much to keep going.

I do appreciate the personal story you told about your grandson. May I suggest you buy him a calligraphy set at a craft store, and work on it together? Make some cards to send out to friends? Cursive/calligraphy can be a fun art form to learn at home if it is not being formally taught in a crowded curriculum.

(While I’m here, I will let you know we also say the pledge of allegiance every day. :)
-Sue

Joyce

My sister ran into this with one of her younger grandsons. She had to run an errand and left information on her husband’s medicine. Fortunately, her grandson told her before she left that he could not read it. My grandchildren are old enough to read cursive but I have no idea if their children do.

Yvonne Bahry Caballero

My teenage granddaughter could not read a handwritten note in cursive; she had her mother read the card that I sent her. Cursive writing does seem to have disappeared from curriculums. Such a shame! We were taught that our handwriting – in cursive – represented us. Oh well – another tradition hits the dust!

Gail

I experienced this at a bridal shower I attended recently. One of my creative outlets is paper crafting and I love to spend a lot of time on individually crafted cards. I included one of my handmade cards with a handwritten note in my shower gift and the bride-to-be had to have her mother read it to her. I had NO idea that this had become a thing, but, like you, I knew it wasn’t being taught in schools anymore, but the thought hadn’t even occurred to me that that translated to younger people not being able to read it! I learned to be more aware of that in the future. DO hope it is brought back to curriculums…..

Yvonne Bahry Caballero

I first realized that cursive was no longer taught was when my pre-teen granddaughter could not read a handwritten card – in cursive – that I sent to her. Her mother; my daughter had to read it to her. What a shame that cursive is no longer included in curriculum. We were taught that our handwriting represented who we were. Oh well – yet another tradition has hit the dust.

Amelia

We have created one of the greatest injustices in our communication experience. Not knowing how to write in cursive, to me seems as though we have placed a stiff punishment on the younger and school age generation. It saddens me.

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The Author

Rosemary Cass, an entrepreneur and former publisher of a magazine for the over-50 population, wants to enrich the lives of older adults by inspiring them to find purpose, learn new things and explore the arts. She blogs to that end at https://seeingitclearlynow.com and also https://thisgrannyrocks.com, a blog dedicated to grandmothers.

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