www.ddmcd.com

View Original

Why Cursive Is Still a Valuable Writing Tool

By Dennis D. McDonald

David Molloy's Do we need to teach children joined-up handwriting? is a good review of the issues swirling around many school systems' decisions to stop teaching cursive or, as Molloy calls it, "joined up handwriting."

As I pointed out in Why I Still Use Cursive I'm a big fan and user of cursive writing. As much as I value cursive, though, I think the real question should be whether -- and how -- to teach students to write.

By "write" I mean physically creating words, sentences, complete paragraphs, and even stories. Sure you can do this with a keyboard. But I believe that there is a more complete integration of thinking and writing when you lay out the words directly and physically on a page with a pen or pencil. After all, you can't just backspace over things written down on paper. You have to think a bit more about what you are saying.

I'm not suggesting you should not teach typing (even though typing itself may go away eventually as speech recognition software improves).

But I suspect there will continue to be more value to learning cursive than just being able to "write pretty."

Copyright (c) 2017 by Dennis D. McDonald.

More on “cursive” and “writing”

See this gallery in the original post