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Mariana

(15,626 posts)
175. As you say, this is a skill that is not that hard.
Sat Sep 17, 2022, 07:40 AM
Sep 2022

People who didn't learn cursive in school, and who want to read old documents, can pick up a book or use the internet and learn to read cursive on their own.

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MY STUDENTS CAN'T READ CURSIVE [View all] douglas9 Sep 2022 OP
This blows my mind, not being able to read cursive or analog clocks. betsuni Sep 2022 #1
My eldest stepson, a doctor, cannot write cursive. Kaleva Sep 2022 #2
Doctors RobinA Sep 2022 #8
Doctors have been infamously unable to write legible cursive for decades muriel_volestrangler Sep 2022 #9
Hell, I'm A Nurse... GB_RN Sep 2022 #63
That's good to know. And TY for being a nurse! Tough times these past 2+ years electric_blue68 Sep 2022 #107
Nurse here too. tavernier Sep 2022 #155
Nice. GB_RN Sep 2022 #159
It was always a psychic guess...LOL LeftInTX Sep 2022 #172
MD's handwriting would seem to be an international problem. GoneOffShore Sep 2022 #176
I'm a teacher. Not only can't student read cursive or write it, but no_hypocrisy Sep 2022 #3
This message was self-deleted by its author Tetrachloride Sep 2022 #7
When I went to school, typing was an elective. Mariana Sep 2022 #15
What level of school? Gidney N Cloyd Sep 2022 #161
My HS did not offer typing class musette_sf Sep 2022 #165
I never took,a typing class but moonscape Sep 2022 #28
I taught myself how to type on my mother's old Royal machine from the 40's. no_hypocrisy Sep 2022 #33
Related Story ProfessorGAC Sep 2022 #103
Aha! 😀👍 electric_blue68 Sep 2022 #113
120 was my best on an IBM Selectric Hermit-The-Prog Sep 2022 #122
Hey! ProfessorGAC Sep 2022 #151
My mom was a super-typist too. hunter Sep 2022 #162
There is a subtle technique difference LeftInTX Sep 2022 #173
I taught myself in college ToxMarz Sep 2022 #52
In the same way that you learned to type when you needed to type Mariana Sep 2022 #112
I never took a typing class... I learned to type on a teletype. Model35mech Sep 2022 #153
For a very long time I was a two-finger typist jmowreader Sep 2022 #31
Now, see, I think there is a correlation there. LisaM Sep 2022 #41
Salutations of letters: these days tis safer, more respectful not to guess gender, even for Peter.nt Bernardo de La Paz Sep 2022 #42
That's less true in foreign countries. LisaM Sep 2022 #44
My 8th grade typing class I took also did some basic business instruction too. Ligyron Sep 2022 #49
Keyboarding is standard in most jh curriculum as part of a cycle JT45242 Sep 2022 #61
I don't use it much, but I can read it. LisaM Sep 2022 #72
A lot of kids only know how to use two thumbs. sdfernando Sep 2022 #74
Typing class was 1/wk for a semester in HS... electric_blue68 Sep 2022 #111
They need to.learn keyboards LeftInTX Sep 2022 #134
my students (college) look at me like I'm possessed tishaLA Sep 2022 #141
A lot of threat writers type with just two fingers.. Grins Sep 2022 #157
My parents and some of their contemporaries had what I call a "beautiful hand". panader0 Sep 2022 #4
That's My Wife ProfessorGAC Sep 2022 #105
😄 Not if you're left-handed! I realized my half-hook for cursive was... electric_blue68 Sep 2022 #117
Over time, my cursive writing has gotten pretty bad. OAITW r.2.0 Sep 2022 #5
Reminds me of my lessons in using a slide rule. JHB Sep 2022 #6
Slide rules sent men to the moon. I still have my fathers that was used on the Apollo missions. Lochloosa Sep 2022 #11
We used computers DavidDvorkin Sep 2022 #18
Yes, but many at least still had their well-used slide rules. Hortensis Sep 2022 #43
The Soviets had excellent slide rules, excellent engineers, excellent mathematicians, and powerful DavidDvorkin Sep 2022 #69
I know..lol! LeftInTX Sep 2022 #135
Slide rules fill gap between hand-waving and complete precise calculation Bernardo de La Paz Sep 2022 #32
For a long time electronic calculators would give burrowowl Sep 2022 #59
March for Science in San Francisco a few years back: lots of creative scientific types NBachers Sep 2022 #36
My dad used one. I asked him to try and teach me bc it was a cool looking... electric_blue68 Sep 2022 #120
Happened many years ago 4Q2u2 Sep 2022 #10
It's not necessary to sign things in cursive. Mariana Sep 2022 #20
my one son's Conjuay Sep 2022 #115
other than my signature i havent written cursive in decades moonshinegnomie Sep 2022 #12
Does cursive have a modern purpose anymore? indigovalley Sep 2022 #13
No, it really doesn't. Mariana Sep 2022 #17
I totally agree. I'm a lefty who had to learn cursive in a right-handed raccoon Sep 2022 #70
I stopped using cursive as soon as they stopped forcing me to do it. Mariana Sep 2022 #84
Fellow lefty! I till write in cursive most of the time with my half hook. Of course I can print, too electric_blue68 Sep 2022 #126
+10 nt reACTIONary Sep 2022 #29
I use it all the time. nt leftyladyfrommo Sep 2022 #85
It doesn't and those teaching hours are better spent on other areas Amishman Sep 2022 #97
I don't think lots of time should be spent on it but meadowlander Sep 2022 #130
Just so you know, there's no requirement that signatures have to be in cursive. Mariana Sep 2022 #14
Yes I teach that to my students indigovalley Sep 2022 #56
Oh, I love that! Imagine having learn Calligraphy in Art College!... electric_blue68 Sep 2022 #128
Although I grew up writing cursive I am unable to decipher family journals from the 1850s-90s. Chainfire Sep 2022 #16
We don't develop skills we rarely (or never) use. Some have trouble learning used skills. Gore1FL Sep 2022 #19
Well... ShazzieB Sep 2022 #26
I learned cursive in the 3rd grade. Gore1FL Sep 2022 #34
I'm an autistic spectrum mildly dyslexic klutz. hunter Sep 2022 #21
Horrible. We do advance, as we need to, in so many ways, but...too slow! :) Hortensis Sep 2022 #53
How do students take notes these days? Writing print letters is significantly slower than cursive progree Sep 2022 #22
I was recording college lectures 20 years ago Amishman Sep 2022 #98
So do you then listen to the recorder and transcribe (type) the recording? progree Sep 2022 #119
I'm listened to the lectures over as a form of studying Amishman Sep 2022 #156
The notes I took in class were not detailed or comprehensive, but rather the important points progree Sep 2022 #164
Lettering is slower if you're used to writing in cursive Mariana Sep 2022 #106
That was the point of cursive - to write faster. That's what they told us anyway in the 60's progree Sep 2022 #121
So? moosewhisperer Sep 2022 #23
That's ok Sympthsical Sep 2022 #24
What's even worse is that nowadays hardly anyone knows how to use an astrolabe! DavidDvorkin Sep 2022 #25
+1 Celerity Sep 2022 #158
Thanls to computers, I stopped writing cursive in the 70's and never looked back. tinrobot Sep 2022 #27
A bad decision on the part of "educators" barbtries Sep 2022 #30
id rather the time be spend on things like math and science moonshinegnomie Sep 2022 #38
I could not disagree more. barbtries Sep 2022 #54
+1 n/t area51 Sep 2022 #89
schools have limited time for instruction moonshinegnomie Sep 2022 #100
Oooo, that was interesting stuff! Learned cursive back in the early '60s ... electric_blue68 Sep 2022 #129
There are MANY things that are not obsolete that boost cognitive development JCMach1 Sep 2022 #150
Not true USALiberal Sep 2022 #160
It's still being taught Meowmee Sep 2022 #181
I might have said the same thing in 1932. BannonsLiver Sep 2022 #66
see post 54 barbtries Sep 2022 #68
And why exactly would any modern teacher spend as much time teaching cursive? plimsoll Sep 2022 #35
I find it sad that the younger generation can't read things from the past: their parents' sinkingfeeling Sep 2022 #37
If they want to read those things, they'll learn to read cursive. Mariana Sep 2022 #142
I have friends with grandchildren, TNNurse Sep 2022 #39
As you say, this is a skill that is not that hard. Mariana Sep 2022 #175
Mental arithmetic: loss of ability impacts critical thinking Bernardo de La Paz Sep 2022 #40
Intrinsic value llmart Sep 2022 #51
Yup, typing and Latin for me too, two most useful classes outside of Mathematics. . . . . nt Bernardo de La Paz Sep 2022 #71
I have a degree in math. Sucked at mental arithmetic LeftInTX Sep 2022 #137
Wow.... Well I wasn't good at anything once we got beyond the major basics... electric_blue68 Sep 2022 #144
I always considered cursive top be a waste of time relayerbob Sep 2022 #45
Neither of my kids can write in cursive mcar Sep 2022 #46
My son's school teaches curisve and that's how he writes. SYFROYH Sep 2022 #47
Good for them! johnp3907 Sep 2022 #48
As an exercise, I just wrote a sentence. Nittersing Sep 2022 #50
I was taught cursive in elementary school, but never used it after that. C Moon Sep 2022 #55
I only write in cursive from grocery lists to letters I write to companies and the government. Dysfunctional Sep 2022 #57
I'm a substitute teacher and when I write a note to the teacher I write it in cursive so students kimbutgar Sep 2022 #58
Same Here ProfessorGAC Sep 2022 #108
When I was a nurse, I hated deciphering doc's bad handwriting, so when childfreebychoice Sep 2022 #60
My two grandsons . . . AverageOldGuy Sep 2022 #62
From what Rebl2 Sep 2022 #64
This 84 year old great grandmother just wrote a note to her 21 year old granddaughter. BarbD Sep 2022 #65
I'm an old who can read cursive, but kcr Sep 2022 #67
Cursive is good for your brain. cbabe Sep 2022 #73
My son has ADHD, and there was a theory that a certain kind of cursive writing (I deurbano Sep 2022 #80
That makes sense meadowlander Sep 2022 #132
A few years ago, I saw some research about the efficacy (in terms of retention) of taking notes by deurbano Sep 2022 #168
I went back to Berkeley at 67, and found I can no longer write by hand! (Not even printing!) deurbano Sep 2022 #75
❤️ ✿❧🌿❧✿ ❤️ Lucinda Sep 2022 #76
voting orleans Sep 2022 #77
I see that as progress. It's really unnecessary to have two writing systems in these modern times. Goodheart Sep 2022 #78
I did shorthand abd cursive. Cursive is so much faster leftyladyfrommo Sep 2022 #82
Ability to read cursive/old fashioned writing helped me immensely in historical ancestry research wishstar Sep 2022 #79
It's helped me a great deal, too. Mariana Sep 2022 #88
Can you read insular minuscule? Act_of_Reparation Sep 2022 #81
This message was self-deleted by its author Mosby Sep 2022 #92
It is exactly the same. Act_of_Reparation Sep 2022 #95
This message was self-deleted by its author Mosby Sep 2022 #96
Hmmmm. can read some of that. Took Calligraphy in Art College. electric_blue68 Sep 2022 #131
I write cursive a page a day ... it is much quicker than printing bedazzled Sep 2022 #83
It blows my mind people don't know how to render fat into heating oil these days Johnny2X2X Sep 2022 #86
Exactly! moosewhisperer Sep 2022 #90
Pretty much alphafemale Sep 2022 #146
I can read it, but it depends on the handwriting. sakabatou Sep 2022 #87
I'm 39 and write in cursive but Jspur Sep 2022 #91
I prefer cursive because its faster sky_masterson Sep 2022 #93
It's faster if that's how you normally write. Mariana Sep 2022 #139
For me it's faster because the pen leaves the paper less sky_masterson Sep 2022 #148
I write in cursive - it's faster and if you're writing a lot, your hand does not cramp as quickly. Midwestern Democrat Sep 2022 #169
I suppose it can be an art and a part of one's personality. Mariana Sep 2022 #178
I think about this a lot as I'm hand-writing GOTV postcards. Ms. Toad Sep 2022 #94
I'd rather teaching time be spent learning Russian than something useless like cursive. YourFriendlySnake Sep 2022 #99
Yeah, I bumped into this several years ago. So much for history and family treasures. nt LAS14 Sep 2022 #101
Yes, no one would ever learn to read cursive on their own Mariana Sep 2022 #104
thing is, you only have to learn it once, maybe in 3rd grade, once you know it you can do it forever IcyPeas Sep 2022 #102
I can't write it anymore. LuckyCharms Sep 2022 #109
To this day I STILL remember the classroom that had the cursive alphabet on the walls WarGamer Sep 2022 #110
Yep. On green placards with white writing... LuckyCharms Sep 2022 #114
Absolutely. WarGamer Sep 2022 #154
People learn what they need to know. KentuckyWoman Sep 2022 #116
I am surprised as well... Meowmee Sep 2022 #118
I never taught my homeschooled son cursive writing, but he can still read cursive liberal_mama Sep 2022 #123
Can you read Latin? alphafemale Sep 2022 #124
I do genealogy research. How will future generations be able to do research? LiberalFighter Sep 2022 #125
If they want to read old documents, they will learn to read cursive. Mariana Sep 2022 #138
It is not easy for those of us that grew up with it to read all cursive. LiberalFighter Sep 2022 #180
No need for it anymore. Xolodno Sep 2022 #127
Cursive is still taught in European schools. Except to doctors. GoneOffShore Sep 2022 #177
My oldest grandson, 18, was explicitly not taught cursive Hekate Sep 2022 #133
There is something you can do about it, IF he's interested in learning it. Mariana Sep 2022 #136
You mean be his teacher? That does not work for everybody. Hekate Sep 2022 #140
You can buy him a book on cursive writing for adults. Mariana Sep 2022 #143
Have you tried teaching them Russian? gldstwmn Sep 2022 #145
I can't remember the last time I needed that skill. Happy Hoosier Sep 2022 #147
Obsolescence, it's a thing... JCMach1 Sep 2022 #149
Exactly. People who need that skill will learn it. Mariana Sep 2022 #179
I remember that when I was a Junior or Senior in college, I took notes in a history class, ... planetc Sep 2022 #152
Do other cultures such as Chinese or Japanese have two different ways of handwriting? Gidney N Cloyd Sep 2022 #163
Yes Meowmee Sep 2022 #166
Arabic and Armenian do LeftInTX Sep 2022 #171
Japanese uses three writing systems -- katakana and hiragana (phonetic) and kanji (ideographic). eppur_se_muova Sep 2022 #174
Maybe it can be made into an elective course. The thing with CUrsive is that even people that can JI7 Sep 2022 #167
I was surprised to find out from my granddaughter that they don't teach it in our schools. GoodRaisin Sep 2022 #170
Good information. Now I can use sloppy cursive as a code to irritate and confound Roisin Ni Fiachra Sep 2022 #182
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