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In reply to the discussion: If you don't know how to write cursive, then how [View all]BlindTiresias
(1,563 posts)64. Most people actually write in a hybrid style
Cursive is strictly faster with quill pens, as that is what it was developed for. The hybrid style has emerged with mechanical pens and IIRC the hybrid style combining print and cursive is actually faster than cursive on mechanical pens due to different limitations and abilities imposed on the writer by the tool.
I can read cursive just fine, but I gave up writing in a strict cursive fashion because it was significantly slower than a hybrid style on mechanical pens. My penmanship was always and continues to be poor as well, so I have no idea where claims that cursive improves penmanship comes from. Additionally, claims that it stimulates brain development should come with some citations.
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I am too. Especially because I am interested in genealogy and sometimes it is tough enough to
seaglass
Dec 2014
#18
Easier to read, not easier to write which I am guessing was the whole point of cursive. I'd hate to
seaglass
Dec 2014
#56
True! Although in some cases, I've almost need a translator for some very old records! nt
DawgHouse
Dec 2014
#58
I can totally write cursive but depending on who wrote it I may not be able to read it.
TheKentuckian
Dec 2014
#117
Of course now it would be easy to learn, I was thinking much further into the future. n/t
seaglass
Dec 2014
#114
I can manage to read & write cursive as well as the old pre-WWII deutsches Schrift,
Jackpine Radical
Dec 2014
#82
If you don't know how to write cursive, then how do you sign a check, or, a contract?
baldguy
Dec 2014
#5
I am appalled, having watched too many h.s. seniors struggle to finish a test in time because they
WinkyDink
Dec 2014
#7
You can buy online a great cursive instruction book called "handwriting without tears"
kimbutgar
Dec 2014
#39
I learned to cursive and later on to type. How is it there was time enough to learn
KittyWampus
Dec 2014
#72
i can sign my name in cursive but cant use cursive writing other than that
belzabubba333
Dec 2014
#20
Writing in cursive is not always faster than typing on a computer, not by a long shot.
SheilaT
Dec 2014
#57
If you don't know how to write cursive, apparently you can still be Treasury Secretary
brooklynite
Dec 2014
#46
knowing print and cursive gives one a choice, an option, expanding possibilities. There is NO
msongs
Dec 2014
#67
Been awhile since a good kids-these-days, decline-of-civilization cursive thread. (nt)
Posteritatis
Dec 2014
#69
The reason for teaching cursive is brain development. AND it's also easier to learn
KittyWampus
Dec 2014
#73
There are studies emerging that cursive writing is linked to better school performance
riderinthestorm
Dec 2014
#81
Thank You. Americans' artistic and imaginative development is stunted enough.
KittyWampus
Dec 2014
#83
Quills, stove carving, clay tablets, cursive writing. Which of these things is not like the others?
Bluenorthwest
Dec 2014
#99