Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Cursive writing a DEAD SKILL??? [View all]Adrahil
(13,340 posts)110. Nonsense.....
Most people who know cursive can't read documents even 150 years old. And Renaissance and Medieval documents? Forget about it.
But if they choose to pursue the study of those things, guess what they do? They learn the required skills.
Do me a favor.... go this the site below and tell me you can read it. It's a copy of the Magna Carta, one of the most important documents in Anglo-American history.
http://www.bl.uk/treasures/magnacarta/magna_2.html
Edit history
Please sign in to view edit histories.
Recommendations
0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):
179 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
RecommendedHighlight replies with 5 or more recommendations
I was watching my girlfriend text in pinyun and watching the machine translate it to characters
Johonny
May 2015
#15
And in that moving on, we must not abandon teaching our kids to be self-sufficient.
Avalux
May 2015
#52
Very short sighted to abandon a "Green" no-energy input skill like cursive writing.
Pooka Fey
May 2015
#74
That would be ""He Who Knowest Not How to Conjugate a Compound Verb", actually.
Codeine
May 2015
#116
I've lost track of the link, but there were one or more studies that showed that it helped the brain
Erich Bloodaxe BSN
May 2015
#10
Your brain uses two different parts when writing versus typing. Writing has shown a more
Exilednight
May 2015
#121
Stephen King and Tom Clancy are best selling authors with tons of awards, but I
Exilednight
May 2015
#161
Or teach them to print, just like they see on their computers, phones, tablets, signs, packaging...
NightWatcher
May 2015
#4
I spent a lifetime being criticized for my penmanship, but printing in no better than script.
hollysmom
May 2015
#83
As another lefty, I wasn't graded on penmanship, but one of my teachers in particular got on my case
raccoon
Jun 2015
#171
Cursive is demonstrably easier to learn than printing. It should be taught first, not printing.
KittyWampus
May 2015
#14
Not until you give me back my betamax i let you borrow to record that special "Family Ties" episode
Scootaloo
May 2015
#81
. . . he said on his machine, attached to other, distant machines by still further machines.
Codeine
May 2015
#64
My kid learned it in 3rd grade this past year. We'll be practicing all summer.
aikoaiko
May 2015
#42
Next we'll drop Cuneiform & Carolingian Minuscule, and where the hell will we be then?
Orrex
May 2015
#46
This. If teaching cursive dissapears, how long before old documents and manuscrips are
lunamagica
May 2015
#56
The ubiquity of computers will make cursive in any language archaic in short order. nt
Codeine
May 2015
#60
You mean like having to learn Latin or Greek in order to decode historical documents?
jeff47
May 2015
#137
He could learn it. Same as if somebody wanted to read Chaucer in Middle English--learn it. nt
raccoon
Jun 2015
#172
Luckily, I took typing about 50 years ago. I can type about as fast as talk and much faster than I
Hoyt
May 2015
#51
not sure about that. I would say most people I encounter cannot even count change
still_one
May 2015
#157
I find it useful (for writing notes, postcards, the few letters I do write) but my kids never use it
Arugula Latte
May 2015
#102
Well the good news is that most of us oldies will have a lifetime career
Baitball Blogger
May 2015
#123
Actually, I think it's important to balance hard knowledge with creativity and soft skills.
Oneironaut
May 2015
#124
Cursive was taught because its use was expected in both business and social communication.
Xithras
May 2015
#128
Were you my student? LOL! I used to buy exam Blue Books at the community college to use for my h.s.
WinkyDink
May 2015
#155
It's obselete, like PE, learning history, state capitals, literature, and 95% of what's taught
Chathamization
May 2015
#166
With the economic middle class gutted, no reason for middle class social skills
Pooka Fey
Jun 2015
#170