Is Cursive Handwriting Dying? And Is That Bad for Society?

Rachel Jeantel, the 19-year-old witness who took the stand in the recent case against George Zimmerman for the death of Trayvon Martin, stunned many when she admitted she couldn't read cursive. But should it really be that surprising? Is cursive actually a dying trend? And if so, is that to the detriment of society?

As some schools consider phasing out cursive, others that have already done so are bringing it back. (Photo: Shutterstock.com)

To Robert Kravitz, who has been an educator for more than a decade, entering the field after being in business, people like Jeantel are the product of a nearly 15 year trend where script handwriting has been gradually taken out of curriculum.

"Over the last 10 to 15 years, it has been phased out systematically by grade," Kravitz, the superintendent of Englewood Public Schools in New Jersey, told TheBlaze in a phone interview.

A study in 2007 by Vanderbilt University found 90 percent of teachers in both public and private schools said they still taught cursive handwriting. This finding might indicate no need for discussion on the lack of handwriting education, but debate over whether to phase out script writing has been going on for years regardless.

Why take cursive away in the first place? Kravitz said the simple answer is that it's too time consuming for teachers.

"More time was spent invested on prepping for a test," he said. And teachers "didn't have time to help develop cursive."

Pediatric occupational therapist Michelle Yoder told TheBlaze an increased dependence on technology is driving this debate as well.

But even though most schools might still be teaching cursive writing, the Common Core Standards do not require script to be taught, which might drive more schools to consider dropping what many are beginning to believe is an obsolete form of communication.

Morgan Polikoff, an assistant professor at the University of Southern California Rossier School of Education, wrote for the New York Times in May that "there is little compelling research to suggest the teaching of cursive positively affects other student skills enough to merit its teaching."

Polikoff argues that there is "no need" to teach both print and cursive.

"The Common Core standards are well constructed and full of the essential skills students need to succeed in reading and writing," Polikoff wrote. "The architects of the standards certainly weighed the inclusion of cursive and believed there was no need to include it. Thus, educators and policymakers should resist the urge to add more skills. Doing so would simply result in a crowded, less-focused curriculum, undermining the strength of the standards."

Kravitz would disagree though. He said that after only a few years of not teaching cursive at Englewood Public Schools they've made the decision to bring it back. North Carolina joined schools making a motion to require writing and reading of cursive in late May as well. Alabama, California and Georgia took action to require cursive education in some capacity, according to a 2012 report by the National Association of State Boards of Education.

For educators who feel like teaching handwriting might take away from getting to important standardized test content, Kravitz said cursive could actually help on test taking.

"Printing adds seconds," he said. "It adds up."

Yoder agreed saying each time a person has to lift up a writing utensil while printing, it add up to valuable minutes wasted on written tests, like those that require essays.

Another potential benefit, Kravitz said, is reducing occupational therapy costs, which he said seems to have risen in recent years. In fact, the Bureau of Labor Statistics expects this field to see a 33 percent increase by 2020, which it deems "much faster than average."

Yoder, who owns her own clinic Touchstone Therapy in North Carolina, said more students might need therapy from specialists like her because they are no longer honing their gross and fine motor skills. Cursive handwriting plays a part in developing them.

Yoder said it helps stimulate the brain in a variety of ways that can have long-lasting implications in a way that typing does not. The very act of how much of handwriting used to be taught -- through repetition of letters and sentences -- helped ingrain skills and information in the brain, she included.

Not that a lack of cursive is completely to blame. Yoder cites what she calls "screen time" -- how much time kids are on computers, watching TV and using other electronic devices -- as one of the major culprits for a reduction in motor skill development. Some of the anecdotal effects of this are that she sees many more children now who have trouble just sitting still.

The effects of increased screen time and the death of cursive, if it were to progress, Yoder said would be apparent in society later down the road.

"Knowing what we know about the brain, I would anticipate long-term effects," she said.

Given his business background, Kravitz too thinks there's a valuable professional element still to be had with cursive.

"Leaders today need to be able to write," he said.

When asked what's wrong with the typed out note, Kravitz said "it's generic."

"Anyone can type a letter," he said. "I don't get the emphasis."

Although Kravitz might send type written letters home to parents within his school district, he makes it a point to at least personally sign each one, as opposed to using a stamp.

Do parents really care about cursive? From Kravitz and Yoder's perspective, they do. Yoder said parents in her office wanted tools like what she used in the clinic to help their kids so much it spurred her to create a kit -- Fundanoodle -- that helps develop cursive writing and age-appropriate motor skills. Kravitz, too, said parents were "thrilled" when it was proposed to bring back cursive.

That might be something to write home about.

Is Cursive Handwriting Dying? And Is That Bad for Society?

lol oh great -

CI = erosion of ASL and now... computer = erosion of cursive handwriting? :laugh2:

*shrug* I'm hardly concerned. the people who don't know cursive handwriting are usually the uneducated type and I don't deal with people like them.

believe it or not - I still write in cursive with a fountain pen :)
 
*shrug* I'm hardly concerned. the people who don't know cursive handwriting are usually the uneducated type and I don't deal with people like them.

Not true, many go to private colleges...you meet them whenever you go to the doctor, or have an appointment with the dentist, or stop in the supermarket to shop for dinner. They work in government, law enforcement, firemen/women, in the private sector, they're everywhere and usually in the places you least expect. When most teens and young adults write on paper, they write in exactly the same format as when using the computer, in the very way you wrote: *shrug*, or LOL. No one writes anything out: it has to be short, fast, abbreviated. Should we really be surprised? People have become so accustomed to tech talk and the computer, that they wouldn't know how to communicate without it. Imagine if the Internet went dead for three whole months….

Computers isolate people...just like most of us on this forum probably spend more time on the Internet than we do interacting with our family or neighbors. Some people spend all day in their room in front of the computer and have no need to leave the house. They're content with artificial relationships, just like what we have on All Deaf; it’s empty of active involvement. Writing is only one part of what's missing in schools today. Social interaction is the other. Students spend more time studying to pass tests than they do interacting with their peers and working out in gym class...if they still have gym that is...they’re fat, they don’t exercise anymore at school, and they can’t write a paper without using a keyboard. There’s a lot of things our parents were taught in school that we weren’t. When you consider what we’ve lost, that’s nothing to celebrate.
 
lol oh great -

CI = erosion of ASL and now... computer = erosion of cursive handwriting? :laugh2:

*shrug* I'm hardly concerned. the people who don't know cursive handwriting are usually the uneducated type and I don't deal with people like them.

believe it or not - I still write in cursive with a fountain pen :)
My 17-year-old grandson (engineering student) writes in cursive with a fountain pen, and types on my dad's 1940's manual typewriter. He thinks it's cool. He also builds computers and is a gamer, so he's not anti-technology.
 
When I was in local deaf ed program in elementary school, I was pulled out of class once a week to work on my cursive. No signing, no deaf culture anything, just improving my handwriting. That was in early 90s though.


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That's one of the reasons why mail volume declines. At USPS, from my first day of work up to now, I notice the decrease of personal letters. In other words, young generations don't write letters to be mailed. All they do is email and/or texting nowadays. Times ch..ch..ch..change. The last time my kids used cursive writing was in high school. I still use cursive writing to communicate with hearing people on paper until the day I die.
 
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Actually, computers only partially solve the problem of speed. Even when using voice recognition software, computer input is no faster than cursive. In fact, the cursive we know of, since the mid 20th century, the Palmer Method, is designed to match the speed of a typewriter. And, since the keyboard hasn't changed, discounting macros, cursive is just as fast as any computer.

Now, you can argue that rewrite time is much faster on a computer. I would also argue that most people don't re-read what they write(guilty at times myself).

I guess if you really want speed, look into shorthand fonts. Short hand is much faster than cursive.

Cursive is just a type of alphabetic writing. In fact, writing itself is not and has not always been alphabetical or phonological.
 
Not true, many go to private colleges...you meet them whenever you go to the doctor, or have an appointment with the dentist, or stop in the supermarket to shop for dinner. They work in government, law enforcement, firemen/women, in the private sector, they're everywhere and usually in the places you least expect. When most teens and young adults write on paper, they write in exactly the same format as when using the computer, in the very way you wrote: *shrug*, or LOL. No one writes anything out: it has to be short, fast, abbreviated. Should we really be surprised? People have become so accustomed to tech talk and the computer, that they wouldn't know how to communicate without it. Imagine if the Internet went dead for three whole months….
quibbling.... I'm not interested in minuscule details

Computers isolate people...just like most of us on this forum probably spend more time on the Internet than we do interacting with our family or neighbors. Some people spend all day in their room in front of the computer and have no need to leave the house. They're content with artificial relationships, just like what we have on All Deaf; it’s empty of active involvement. Writing is only one part of what's missing in schools today. Social interaction is the other. Students spend more time studying to pass tests than they do interacting with their peers and working out in gym class...if they still have gym that is...they’re fat, they don’t exercise anymore at school, and they can’t write a paper without using a keyboard. There’s a lot of things our parents were taught in school that we weren’t. When you consider what we’ve lost, that’s nothing to celebrate.
eh not really. I'm here in AD a lot and I'm also in social life a lot. I'm not fat. I exercise. you're generalizing way too much.... on negative side.
 
Being the fine product of the American public education system, I can barely do math and have no idea how to read or write in cursive. I admit, my penmanship is horrible in print.
 
Being the fine product of the American public education system, I can barely do math and have no idea how to read or write in cursive. I admit, my penmanship is horrible in print.

Formal, early education is not, as some would like to believe, the end of leaning for human civilization it is only the beginning. You will have plenty of time through the rest of your life improve your education.

Think of it as a hobby, there is no time frame on when to complete it.
 
I still teach my students cursive even though it is not in the curriculum. They all want to learn it so I take like 15 mins of my own free time to teach them how honers and write in cursive. Why not?
 
I write with some weird combination of cursive and print together... lol... but I can read both, and I can write both... I was taught that stuff in grade school. =P Though typing is SOOOOOO much faster. =P

Same here..I write with the same kind of combination. I love it!
 
ban computers from schools, and bring back handwriting skills
 
The same arguments probably occurred when clay tablets were replaced by papyrus.
 
sad, i use both, combined of cursive and print .. jeez thanks a lot to the computer that i rely on keyboard too excess.


I hate hate hate hate hate hate reading teachers or doctors writing in cursive like those letters are useless for me to read because i cant read their writing in cursive. it makes sense why cursive become decreased.

Yes, same here.

My boss and ENT doctor used messy cursive so I can't understand at all.

I asked them to use print writing or typing.

ASL interpreter is #1!
 
i can touch type, and write and print, and freehand drawing just i dont give much shit...but do bring back handwriting and that is in essays too, stop the young uns from being lazy get them to use their brain properly, have it developed properly!!
 
whats more its the rich ones who will, and the poor ones will only labour like oil rigs work...and everyone else stuck at hometowns doing menial work with involves NO computers just signing in forms and few ticks and scribbles in job forms...think about it
i don't believe school boards have their facts straight, which should'nt be surprising, its all political BS
 
Not true, many go to private colleges...you meet them whenever you go to the doctor, or have an appointment with the dentist, or stop in the supermarket to shop for dinner. They work in government, law enforcement, firemen/women, in the private sector, they're everywhere and usually in the places you least expect. When most teens and young adults write on paper, they write in exactly the same format as when using the computer, in the very way you wrote: *shrug*, or LOL. No one writes anything out: it has to be short, fast, abbreviated. Should we really be surprised? People have become so accustomed to tech talk and the computer, that they wouldn't know how to communicate without it. Imagine if the Internet went dead for three whole months….

Computers isolate people...just like most of us on this forum probably spend more time on the Internet than we do interacting with our family or neighbors. Some people spend all day in their room in front of the computer and have no need to leave the house. They're content with artificial relationships, just like what we have on All Deaf; it’s empty of active involvement. Writing is only one part of what's missing in schools today. Social interaction is the other. Students spend more time studying to pass tests than they do interacting with their peers and working out in gym class...if they still have gym that is...they’re fat, they don’t exercise anymore at school, and they can’t write a paper without using a keyboard. There’s a lot of things our parents were taught in school that we weren’t. When you consider what we’ve lost, that’s nothing to celebrate.

Well, I think you are smart member and there is something that I don't agree with you due to different philosophy. I shouldn't state the ugly comment about you over death penalty.

In other thread, you told me that I spent all of my life on computer in bedroom. That was wrong assumption. I'm full time student at university and I'm currently on summer break. I have plenty of life, such as walking around neighborhood, cooking, driving, shopping and cruising. The deaf community in my area is pathetic and I only went to deaf school for annual event, such as homecoming. Sometime, I went to Atlanta for further sightseeing.

I love AD forum because it is nice to socialize with many deaf members and it was more comfortable to socialize than go to local deaf event in my area that infested with drama, stalking and religious.

quibbling.... I'm not interested in minuscule details

eh not really. I'm here in AD a lot and I'm also in social life a lot. I'm not fat. I exercise. you're generalizing way too much.... on negative side.

I'm not fat either and I lost 75 lbs from 2011 to 2013 so I'm not overweight anymore.
 
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