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Forums > General Discussion > SHOULD writing in CURSIVE STILL be Taught?
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Reply #30 posted 07/07/11 5:23am

ZombieKitten

Hershe said:

ZombieKitten said:

I have quite nice cursive script, the master writes in all caps, he gives me a shopping list, and when I'm at the supermarket I read it and imagine him shouting at me TOMATOES!!! EGGS!!! confused



:lol: :lol:

This is mine:


Your writing!!! love very cool cool
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Reply #31 posted 07/07/11 5:47am

abigail05

I LOVE beautiful writing. I would consider taking a calligraphy class, or even some lessons in cursive. Mine always sucked ass lol

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Reply #32 posted 07/07/11 5:51am

Hershe

avatar

ZombieKitten said:

Hershe said:



:lol: :lol:

This is mine:


Your writing!!! love very cool cool


Thanks, Char! It's so close to my Mother's (read older) fancier swirl that in high school I could forge "Please excuse Hershe from class/classes" notes in order to ditch and go shopping without ever getting caught! :woot:

My daughter was not taught cursive in school as well as I was and could not duplicate mine. Poor girl. lol
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Reply #33 posted 07/07/11 9:08am

Nothinbutjoy

avatar

Yes, it should still be taught. It is a skill that goes beyond just the act of writing.

Should people still learn to spell when all computers have spell check?



For the record... YES! LOL
I'm firmly planted in denial
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Reply #34 posted 07/07/11 10:09am

NDRU

avatar

If we don't learn cursive, how will we give autographs to our fans?

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Reply #35 posted 07/07/11 10:25am

Tokyo89

avatar

lol

I love cursive!!!

She Don't Speak..But She Remembers
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Reply #36 posted 07/07/11 10:29am

HotGritz

avatar

When did people stop writing in cursive? I see it all the time especially at the bank. The real question is should writing be taught period? All this texting and bbming and princebonics and email; its a wonder people know how to write at all.

I'M NOT SAYING YOU'RE UGLY. YOU JUST HAVE BAD LUCK WHEN IT COMES TO MIRRORS AND SUNLIGHT!
RIP Dick Clark, Whitney Houston, Don Cornelius, Heavy D, and Donna Summer. rose
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Reply #37 posted 07/07/11 12:24pm

obsessed

I'm a bit old-fashioned, I guess, but I think cursive writing should still be taught.

I fluctuate between printing and cursive, but actually it's still faster for me to

write than print. Why should anything go away just because it's not used as

much?

I know, I know...I still like an actual CD as well, over downloads. lol

And btw, I still write letters to my 90+ year-old relatives, because they

don't have internet and have trouble hearing over the phone. They may

have trouble seeing too, but they write back sometimes, so it can't be

too bad lol

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Reply #38 posted 07/07/11 12:27pm

Shanti0608

obsessed said:

I'm a bit old-fashioned, I guess, but I think cursive writing should still be taught.

I fluctuate between printing and cursive, but actually it's still faster for me to

write than print. Why should anything go away just because it's not used as

much?

I know, I know...I still like an actual CD as well, over downloads. lol

And btw, I still write letters to my 90+ year-old relatives, because they

don't have internet and have trouble hearing over the phone. They may

have trouble seeing too, but they write back sometimes, so it can't be

too bad lol

yeahthat I still send my husbands Nanna letters in the post. She loves it. I used to do that for my great grandmother until 2002 when she passed away.

My great grandmother taught me cursive writing before I was taught it in school. I guess it is something old school and now that computers are used for everything we wont even need to write.

confused

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Reply #39 posted 07/07/11 12:43pm

vainandy

avatar

NDRU said:

If we don't learn cursive, how will we give autographs to our fans?

That's true. And signatures are also required on just about everything legal.

Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #40 posted 07/07/11 12:44pm

Alej

avatar

I wasn't taught to write in cursive. lol

The orger formerly known as theodore
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Reply #41 posted 07/07/11 12:45pm

Shanti0608

NDRU said:

If we don't learn cursive, how will we give autographs to our fans?

You could carry a stamp lol

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Reply #42 posted 07/07/11 12:46pm

vainandy

avatar

HotGritz said:

When did people stop writing in cursive? I see it all the time especially at the bank. The real question is should writing be taught period? All this texting and bbming and princebonics and email; its a wonder people know how to write at all.

I've never understood the fascination with texting. They're already punching buttons on a phone so just dial the damn number and talk to the person.

Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #43 posted 07/07/11 12:47pm

Efan

avatar

I'm old-school, and old, so I say yes.

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Reply #44 posted 07/07/11 12:54pm

HotGritz

avatar

vainandy said:

HotGritz said:

When did people stop writing in cursive? I see it all the time especially at the bank. The real question is should writing be taught period? All this texting and bbming and princebonics and email; its a wonder people know how to write at all.

I've never understood the fascination with texting. They're already punching buttons on a phone so just dial the damn number and talk to the person.

ya know? highfive

Although I have a problem actually saying "BRING YO DICK". I'd rather text that.

I'M NOT SAYING YOU'RE UGLY. YOU JUST HAVE BAD LUCK WHEN IT COMES TO MIRRORS AND SUNLIGHT!
RIP Dick Clark, Whitney Houston, Don Cornelius, Heavy D, and Donna Summer. rose
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Reply #45 posted 07/07/11 2:23pm

kimrachell

i still write in cursive, and i think it should still be taught.

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Reply #46 posted 07/07/11 4:39pm

ZombieKitten

Hershe said:

ZombieKitten said:



Your writing!!! love very cool cool


Thanks, Char! It's so close to my Mother's (read older) fancier swirl that in high school I could forge "Please excuse Hershe from class/classes" notes in order to ditch and go shopping without ever getting caught! :woot:

My daughter was not taught cursive in school as well as I was and could not duplicate mine. Poor girl. lol


:falloff: !!! hug
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Reply #47 posted 07/07/11 8:13pm

obsessed

Shanti0608 said:

obsessed said:

I'm a bit old-fashioned, I guess, but I think cursive writing should still be taught.

I fluctuate between printing and cursive, but actually it's still faster for me to

write than print. Why should anything go away just because it's not used as

much?

I know, I know...I still like an actual CD as well, over downloads. lol

And btw, I still write letters to my 90+ year-old relatives, because they

don't have internet and have trouble hearing over the phone. They may

have trouble seeing too, but they write back sometimes, so it can't be

too bad lol

yeahthat I still send my husbands Nanna letters in the post. She loves it. I used to do that for my great grandmother until 2002 when she passed away.

My great grandmother taught me cursive writing before I was taught it in school. I guess it is something old school and now that computers are used for everything we wont even need to write.

confused

See I find that refreshing....handwritten letters shouldn't die just because we

don't 'need' to write. I say "buck the system"....there's nothing wrong with

'old school'.

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Reply #48 posted 07/07/11 8:39pm

TonyVanDam

avatar

I vote yes.

Cursive Handwriting does matter! Without mastering this skill by the 3rd grade, a child is not going to be able to express himself/herself. And sometimes, laptops & iPads will either run low on battery power or they will break.

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Reply #49 posted 07/07/11 11:56pm

Muse2NoPharaoh

avatar

TonyVanDam said:

I vote yes.

Cursive Handwriting does matter! Without mastering this skill by the 3rd grade, a child is not going to be able to express himself/herself. And sometimes, laptops & iPads will either run low on battery power or they will break.

Ok errrtttt :applies brakes:

In what way will a child not express themselves without it? Granted, Ive been reading it for days from letters of my ancestors and have quite enjoyed the artistry. You however, have just printed a post that could have easily been hand written.

Well look whom I found dipping their toe in the murky waters! :eyeroll: At least offer me a damn cup of coffee!
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Reply #50 posted 07/08/11 12:15am

BombSquad

avatar

is that a trick question? if not the answer is of course YES

next topic: should we still talk person to person? after all we have SMS now....

from Wiki:

In one academic study, first graders who could write only 10 to 12 letters per minute were given 45 minutes of handwriting instruction for nine weeks; their writing speed doubled, their expressed thoughts became more complex, and their sentence construction skills increased

Has anyone tried unplugging the United States and plugging it back in?
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Reply #51 posted 07/08/11 12:21am

ZombieKitten

BombSquad said:

is that a trick question? if not the answer is of course YES

next topic: should we still talk person to person? after all we have SMS now....

from Wiki:

In one academic study, first graders who could write only 10 to 12 letters per minute were given 45 minutes of handwriting instruction for nine weeks; their writing speed doubled, their expressed thoughts became more complex, and their sentence construction skills increased

I'm way more social thanks to SMS, it's really got me to overcome my fear of talking on the phone, or rather, it's a way around it. I'm in contact with my friends a lot more now!

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Reply #52 posted 07/08/11 12:41am

Shanti0608

obsessed said:

Shanti0608 said:

yeahthat I still send my husbands Nanna letters in the post. She loves it. I used to do that for my great grandmother until 2002 when she passed away.

My great grandmother taught me cursive writing before I was taught it in school. I guess it is something old school and now that computers are used for everything we wont even need to write.

confused

See I find that refreshing....handwritten letters shouldn't die just because we

don't 'need' to write. I say "buck the system"....there's nothing wrong with

'old school'.

highfive

Nothing wrong with old school. I still write out and send thank you letters when possible. My best friend lives 5000 miles from me now and she does not have a computer. She is in her 60's and is afraid of computers so going to the library to use one doesn't happen. We have to rely on writing letters most of the time. I do try to call her once a month or so but when funds are tight, we have to rely on pen & paper! We actually send one another photos on photo paper.

lol

On the text message topic, it is a nice way to drop a quick note. I wish my mom could figure out texting and realise that she does have it on her phone. It would be helpful in emergencies, right now we have to rely on emails and yahoo.

confused

I hate when ppl type in text shortcut. pissed

Yes, I am old.

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Reply #53 posted 07/08/11 3:01am

imago

NDRU said:

imago said:

Machaela, honey, signing your name in print is just strange hug

It's nicer than the big "X" and bottle of KY that you use!

falloff falloff falloff falloff

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Reply #54 posted 07/08/11 3:03am

ZombieKitten

imago said:

NDRU said:

It's nicer than the big "X" and bottle of KY that you use!

falloff falloff falloff falloff

I have had this great idea of writing words on glass with KY to photograph for decades now, and still haven't done it! err

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Reply #55 posted 07/08/11 3:58am

Fauxie

avatar

I don't know if it should be taught. It doesn't really seem necessary anymore, but it is nice.

I don't really have a set handwriting style anymore though. I alternate between about 4 or 5 styles depending on... well, I don't know really. One is quite close to my handwriting for most of my teen and adult years so I guess that's my normal handwriting, and it's in cursive, but I do non-cursive big round handwriting more, and angular styles sometimes, plus some with elements of calligraphy that I did as a kid. They're all quite different.

Like shanti0608, my wife and I still send letters by post to relatives, for thank-you cards and just newsy update letters.

MY COUSIN WORKS IN A PHARMACY AND SHE SAID THEY ENEMA'D PRANCE INTO OBLIVION WITH FENTONILS!!
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Reply #56 posted 07/08/11 5:11am

Shanti0608

Fauxie said:

I don't know if it should be taught. It doesn't really seem necessary anymore, but it is nice.

I don't really have a set handwriting style anymore though. I alternate between about 4 or 5 styles depending on... well, I don't know really. One is quite close to my handwriting for most of my teen and adult years so I guess that's my normal handwriting, and it's in cursive, but I do non-cursive big round handwriting more, and angular styles sometimes, plus some with elements of calligraphy that I did as a kid. They're all quite different.

Like shanti0608, my wife and I still send letters by post to relatives, for thank-you cards and just newsy update letters.

highfive

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Reply #57 posted 07/08/11 5:14am

TonyVanDam

avatar

Muse2NoPharaoh said:

TonyVanDam said:

I vote yes.

Cursive Handwriting does matter! Without mastering this skill by the 3rd grade, a child is not going to be able to express himself/herself. And sometimes, laptops & iPads will either run low on battery power or they will break.

Ok errrtttt :applies brakes:

In what way will a child not express themselves without it? Granted, Ive been reading it for days from letters of my ancestors and have quite enjoyed the artistry. You however, have just printed a post that could have easily been hand written.

rolleyes

If you do not know the answer to THAT^ already, then your level of humanity has already been compromise and I can not help you. disbelief

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Reply #58 posted 07/08/11 8:30am

paisleypark4

avatar

I really found out that schools were not teaching it too much anymore when my little sister could not read a letter my mother gave her that was in beautiful cursive..i was....SHOCKED to actually hear her say this....she is 13 now....

Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records.
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Reply #59 posted 07/08/11 8:49am

Shyra

vainandy said:

Most definitely. I'm a secretary so taking messages is a part of my job. I used to print them but when the other line started ringing, I stopped that real quick. I write faster in cursive than in print. And if I write down things that my boss wants me to type in a memo, it's much quicker to write them in cursive than in print. I keep telling her I can type much faster than I can write so just tell me what she wants and I'll type while she talks but she won't do that. She's determined she's going to get me to "abbreviate" when I write to make it faster but she's got an uphill battle because I hate to abbreviate. I don't like to do something that I might get used to that might affect me when I get ready to turn something important for someone to see. Bad habits are easy to form and I'd hate for it to look like some damn princebonics. lol

highfive Damn skippy! Great minds think alike! lol Do we work for the same bitch? razz

But I think it should still be taught because everyone should know how to write a signature; it makes it unique to you. Being that I work at a university, I see students' penmenship every day. The majority of them print, but their signatures are fucked! Some don't even have a signature because they print their name, too.

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Forums > General Discussion > SHOULD writing in CURSIVE STILL be Taught?