Behind the Art and Skill of Cursive Handwriting ✍🏼

Image Credit: energepic.com

I know that I’ve played this tune time and time again, but I am grief-stricken over the fact that due to the insane surge of modern technology, the art of handwriting and good penmanship has disappeared from schools. I am dismayed we are now living in a world where penmanship is becoming a lost world of beauty, art, and hand-written communications. The good thing is that there is a handful of schools, teachers, parents, and tutors who are implementing the technique and practice of handwriting with their students and children. I applaud that.

There is an even brighter light shown on the importance of handwriting and its connection to neuroscience pointing to the benefits of writing by hand.

One recent post on Psychology Today, for example, notes that “handwriting stimulates [the genesis of] complex brain connections essential in encoding new information and forming memories.” Studies employing high-density electroencephalogram technology point to the conclusion that note-takers, grocery-list compilers, and those who make calendar entries by hand are more likely to better retain the information. Entering information by hand also heightened the speed of recall by as much as 25% (not relying on a smartphone or personal information management” software).

The act of learning to write handsome, fluent calligraphy, and personal letters expresses creativity, individuality, personality, and communication skills in an artistic and regal way. Since cursive writing was required to be learned by second grade, my mother would always have us practice our writing, especially when she would tell us it looked like chicken-scratch. UGH! But you know what? I am so glad that she did. Perhaps that’s why I do a lot of writing, doodling, and journaling by hand every day, for the fringe, health, and lifestyle benefits.

Still, we can find balance in traditional handwriting instruction, coupled with digital literacy. It doesn’t have to be one without the other.

Image Credit: Katya Wolf

The Disappearing Act of Cursive Writing is Devastating

Constitution of the United States of America, Cursive Writing

Image source: Brainscape

So, what do you think about the disappearing act of cursive writing in today’s communication correspondences? Although National Handwriting Month and National Handwriting Day are observed in the month of January, cursive writing should regain its national elementary standard, just as we see evidence of cultural character writing in other languages.

I’ve had numerous conversations with many adults my age who are alarmed when they find out that children are no longer taught the art of cursive writing in school. I recently had a discussion with a cousin of mine and we talked about some who think when they see such script that it is written in some foreign language or is some form of hieroglyphics. This saddens me because this is so widespread.

My cousin also noted that she is adamant about her grandchildren and great-grandchildren learning to write cursive instead of printing all the time whenever they come to visit her. An alarming point she made was, how on earth will they be able to read the original presentation of the Constitution of the United States if they are unable to read cursive writing? I have to say that correlation never crossed my mind, but it is a very valid point that challenges our basic capabilities beyond the keyboard.

So why was cursive writing put on the basic chopping block? By the time I reached second grade I was practicing cursive writing. It actually made me feel rather grown up and smart! 😀 This was not an option as penmanship became an identifiable character trait of an individual. We took pride in learning cursive writing and reading it just as intently as reading standard print writing.

Bring back cursive writing because, without this basic tool, it could one day be a matter of life and death for those who may need it when no one is around who understands it and can interpret what it is. What do you think? Do you write and can read cursive writing?

Is Cursive Writing Becoming a Foreign Entity?

Bill of Rights, Handwriting, Cursive Writing

Image Source: Mental Floss

I heard someone giving an interview on TV the other day discussing the subject surrounding basic common things we were required to do in the past. In a world where artificial technology invades our daily lives more and more, it may be tragic that without certain survival skills our upcoming generations may be left handicapped when they need it the most. For one thing, verbal communication is literally stifled because everywhere, everyone is texting, replacing normal verbal exchange. Are we losing our inborn natural ability to have fluid, normal conversations like it once was?

Cursive Handwriting, Signature

Image Credit: Karen Arnold

Secondly, is there a curse on cursive writing? This particular interviewee noted that his daughter responded when asked to read the Bill of Rights, that she couldn’t read it because it was written in some foreign language. Yes, this teen is a U. S. born citizen and yes it is the same image of the Bill of Rights we’ve come to know. Since schools are not teaching cursive writing anymore, the digital, new wave of communication does not put emphasis on the importance of handwriting (printing maybe, but not cursive writing). What do we do?

We used to use the term, “Put your John Hancock here” and people understood what we meant (to sign your signature on a designated line). Nowadays many people ask who is John Hancock? They don’t think there is a need for a ‘signature’ because everything is done through advanced technology without requiring an actual handwritten signature.

I think without learning the basics about the art of handwriting, (and this is not just about those who are illiterate or functionally illiterate) in the long run, there may come a time when technology will not be readily available to translate for you. OMG…perish the thought! Is cursive writing becoming a modern form of written morse code? :-/

Today is National Handwriting Day!

Celebrating National Handwriting Day!

Since more people are communicating electronically instead of writing and communicating by hand, penmanship has fallen in the trenches. The pride taken in one’s penmanship is not as detail-oriented as it was before the popularity of computers and electronic keyboard devices.

It is amazing that there is a continuing controversy about the role of handwriting lessons in schools. A great number of teachers support teaching children using keyboards, while other teachers feel that handwriting (particularly cursive handwriting) will have a better impact on a child’s ability to read and write. How can we expect kids to understand how to read cursive writing, if they are not taught how to write and understand the aesthetics of it?

Personally, I am an advocate for good, legible handwriting although I use my keyboards a lot as an adult. Throughout elementary school, writing was a very instrumental piece of our learning process and communications. I feel that it should be taught in schools like it once was, because in reality it seems to be a dying art. We always seem to be in a rush when writing and it clearly shows that when others try to read it.

I witness everyday evidence of handwriting that many of my schoolteachers would cringe at. My mother used to call it “chicken-scratch” and while growing up, she was adamant about all of her children learning to write legibly and to develop good writing habits. Good handwriting promotes an organized approach to communication and creativity. Practice good handwriting habits and you just may find that it opens a core of creative opportunity that you never imagined.

 

Do You Think Penmanship Matters?

Is Your Handwriting Becoming Extinct?

Are we losing touch with the communicative connection between pen and paper? When you write, do you find yourself printing or cursive writing? Has Cursive Writing Fallen From Grace? Are we more co-dependent with sending messages using computer and mobile phone keyboards? The more time we spend on using the convenience of computer or mobile communications when sending a message, are we alienating our ability to write proficiently, clearly and legibly?

Was does your handwriting say to you? Is Your Handwriting Revealing Some of Your Innermost Secrets?On the other hand, does it show social, mental and creative deficiency? You do not have to be a professional penmanship master in order to write with distinction and legibility.

There has been much discussion and debate about the crisis of our handwriting and what it could mean to our personal development. I found a great news clip that was broadcast on “Sunday Morning on CBS” that I would like to share with you.  A Farewell to Handwriting? It reveals a lot about the significance of our penmanship and the value of historical attributes to this rapidly fading craft.