Preface
I refer you to The WASHINGTON POST, July 27, 2016,
page 1, far left column headline, “Don’t write epitaph for cursive just yet”
By Joe Heim.
There have been other writers on thIS subject - the value of
teaching and learning cursive writing. One of note was by Gene Weingarten, also
a WASHINGTON POST writer that appeared in THE WASHINGTON POST MAGAZINE, October
28, 2012.
I WONDER IN CURSIVE Norma S. Tucker, 8/15/11
I hear cursive
writing is being tossed out of the curriculum in some schools. Not needed in a
communication world of text messages, tweets, and e-mails. One only has to
handwrite one’s name, and print lettering often will do. I used my internet
browser to find out, is this really the case? Some say it is antiquated;
schools should concentrate on typing skills. The alternative argument: learning
cursive style is important to childhood brain development, refinement of fine
motor skills, hand strength, and finger dexterity.
Writing personal
notes and letters by hand is considered passé. I think of all the personal
handwritten correspondence that has provided our society with insight into our
lives as well as observations in the wild and on the spot historical accounts.
I bemoan future generations who will miss the thrill of opening a mailbox to
see a handwritten envelope - to recognize or question the distinctive handwriting, to
ponder the nature of the message inside. But will there be mailboxes in the future
like the one I open with a key in the lobby of my high rise, or those brass
letter slots inserted in the front doors of town and suburban homes, or the
mailboxes with flags perched on posts in front of rural homes?
I try to move with
the future, though it seems to me I don’t need much of it. My digital camera,
desktop and laptop are probably considered vintage. I text my grandchildren and grown children. I
bought an e-reader, good for reading on the metro or waiting in a doctor’s
office, if I’ve remembered to charge it. Easy to carry and no dirty hands from
toting The Washington Post. Now I read the paper at home where I wash my
hands between sections while one or another of my electronic devices is under
charge.
I like to write personal notes, to
choose which note card to send to a particular person – plain buff, or a Native
American proverb on the front, or an artist’s rendition. I select which pen to
use, the blue Waterman my daughter gave me one Mother’s Day or a sterling
silver Tiffany purse pen I gave to my mother and retrieved for myself after her
death. I pause for a moment, think how to thank, or congratulate, or
console.
I learned cursive writing in second
grade. Miss Prager passed out half-sheets of mimeographed papers with repeat
patterns of two dark lines separated by a middle fine line. We used our
sharpened pencils to fill the fine middle line to the bottom dark line with
cursive small case a’s and c’s. Small l’s and h’s touched the top line, t’s and
d’s slightly below; g’s and p’s went below the lower dark line to the next
middle fine line.
In Mrs. Sinclair’s fourth grade
class, we were introduced to pen and ink. My parents bought me my first
fountain pen, a red Esterbrook, and two bottles of blue-black ink-one for home,
one for school.
Some kids had trouble with cursive
writing. I wonder, could that have been a predictor they would become
physicians, a field in which practitioners are known for indecipherable
handwriting. Does poor cursive handwriting indicate success in college organic
chemistry, an undergraduate requirement for admittance to medical school?
I suppose handwriting analysis is a
dying profession. At amusement parks and fairs, I lined up at the handwriting
booth to wait my turn to have someone tell me about myself - what the
distinctive shape, size, and slant of my writing revealed about my personality.
I wonder, what will distinguish one’s individual style of printing?
The word, cursive, comes from a
Latin root, flowing. One letter flows
into another to form words. Words flow into streams of thought, declarations,
inquiry, fantasy, and opinion. Ancient
philosophers and scholars, Renaissance and Enlightenment luminaries, and
American revolutionaries wrote our cherished texts in cursive. We queue at
museums, libraries, and archives to view protected, precious documents written
in cursive. If we don’t learn to write it, how will we learn to read it.
For those like me who believe in
the value of teaching cursive writing - for its place in childhood development,
its individuality, personal touch, historical significance, its utility, and
its flow, fear not. There are numerous on-line programs to teach, learn, and
practice handwriting, cursive style. Some even include Miss Prager’s
worksheets.
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