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The Death Of Handwriting

by @ 7:52 pm on July 26, 2009.

Time Magazine notes the impending death of yet another skill that was once thought necessary:

I can’t remember how to write a capital Z in cursive. The rest of my letters are shaky and stiff, my words slanted in all directions. It’s not for lack of trying. In grade school I was one of those insufferable girls who used pink pencils and dotted their i’s with little circles. I experimented with different scripts, and for a brief period I even took the time to make two-story a’s, with the fancy overhang used in most fonts (including this magazine’s). But everything I wrote, I wrote in print. I am a member of Gen Y, the generation that shunned cursive. And now there is a group coming after me, a boom of tech-savvy children who don’t remember life before the Internet and who text-message nearly as much as they talk. They have even less need for good penmanship. We are witnessing the death of handwriting.

People born after 1980 tend to have a distinctive style of handwriting: a little bit sloppy, a little bit childish and almost never in cursive. The knee-jerk explanation is that computers are responsible for our increasingly illegible scrawl, but Steve Graham, a special-education and literacy professor at Vanderbilt University, says that’s not the case. The simple fact is that kids haven’t learned to write neatly because no one has forced them to. “Writing is just not part of the national agenda anymore,” he says. (See pictures of the college dorm’s evolution.)

Cursive started to lose its clout back in the 1920s, when educators theorized that because children learned to read by looking at books printed in manuscript rather than cursive, they should learn to write the same way. By World War II, manuscript, or print writing, was in standard use across the U.S. Today schoolchildren typically learn print in kindergarten, cursive in third grade. But they don’t master either one. Over the decades, daily handwriting lessons have decreased from an average of 30 minutes to 15.

Zaner-Bloser, the nation’s largest supplier of handwriting manuals, offers coursework through the eighth grade but admits that these days, schools rarely purchase materials beyond the third grade. The company, which is named for two men who ran a penmanship school back when most business documents were handwritten, occasionally modifies its alphabet according to cultural tastes and needs.

And while your first instinct, and mine, would be to place the blame for the death of handwriting on the advance of technology, that isn’t necessarily the case:

Technology is only part of the reason. A study published in the February issue of the Journal of Educational Psychology found that just 9% of American high school students use an in-class computer more than once a week. The cause of the decline in handwriting may lie not so much in computers as in standardized testing. The Federal Government’s landmark 1983 report A Nation at Risk, on the dismal state of public education, ushered in a new era of standardized assessment that has intensified since the passage in 2002 of the No Child Left Behind Act. “In schools today, they’re teaching to the tests,” says Tamara Thornton, a University of Buffalo professor and the author of a history of American handwriting. “If something isn’t on a test, it’s viewed as a luxury.” Garcia agrees. “It’s getting harder and harder to balance what’s on the test with the rest of what children need to know,” she says. “Reading is on there, but handwriting isn’t, so it’s not as important.” In other words, schools don’t care how a child holds her pencil as long as she can read

And, honestly, I can’t really come up with a good rebuttal for that.

When is handwriting really necessary today ?

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3 Responses to “The Death Of Handwriting”

  1. Scott Says:

    It not.

    BUT… I may be a real oddball, but I enjoy handwriting. I carry a paper notebook with me everywhere I go. And a pen.

    A lot of times, in the same pocket as my Blackberry. (Or used to, I don’t carry a Blackberry any longer).

    When I was blogging more, most posts started out as a handwritten note in the notebook. Sometimes 3 or more pages worth of notes.

    When I take a photograph I think might be notable, I write some notes in my notebook.

    I guess I’m a dinosaur.

  2. chsw Says:

    It’s necessary! Have received incorrect prescriptions because of poor writing by physicians. Have seen pharmacists call drs offices to ask what prescription was intended. Obamanable Care won’t fix this.

  3. gotland Says:

    #2

    How true! –

    Besides, I LOVE getting a handwritten letter or postcard.

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