Students Should Be Taught Cursive Writing

Document Details

BountifulField1964

Uploaded by BountifulField1964

Suncoast School for Innovative Studies

Tags

cursive writing handwriting literacy education

Summary

This document discusses the importance of teaching cursive writing to students. It highlights the benefits of cursive writing, emphasizing improved brain function, increased focus, and effective communication skills, and compares it to typing. Advocates for cursive's role in education, stressing its impact on brain health and cognitive development.

Full Transcript

## Students Should be Taught Cursive Today, cursive writing is nearly a lost skill. Many schools have replaced cursive instruction with other lessons that are considered more important. Students should be taught cursive writing in school for many reasons: stimulation of the brain, increased focus,...

## Students Should be Taught Cursive Today, cursive writing is nearly a lost skill. Many schools have replaced cursive instruction with other lessons that are considered more important. Students should be taught cursive writing in school for many reasons: stimulation of the brain, increased focus, and having ways to communicate are all benefits of learning to read and write in cursive. When people write in cursive, they improve their brains. At the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, a neuropsychology professor, Audrey van der Meer, did a study on 12-year-old children and young adults. She found that cursive writing got the brain ready for learning. More electrical activity was stimulated in the brain's lobes. This affects memory and how we process new information. Writing by hand in cursive helps people become better learners. Wouldn't you love to be able to focus better? Cursive writing can help. Writing facts on paper in cursive forces people to slow down. The process of handwriting notes leads to more time to process and think about the content. People do not struggle as much to recall the information later. Typing does not achieve the same results. Cursive writing has also been linked to helping with problems like dyslexia, which can often interrupt focus. Learning cursive writing also gives students another way to communicate. Members of older generations often write in cursive. If students can't read cursive, they might be missing important information or nice messages. Imagine if Grandma sends you a birthday card. She writes a sweet note inside about how you've always been her favorite grandchild, but you can't read it because it's in cursive! You also want to be able to sign your name to that big check she gave you in the card so it can be cashed at the bank. Signatures are done in cursive on many other legal and financial documents, as well. Being able to sign your name is a life skill. Some people believe that typing is a more important skill in today's world. People are communicating more in digital ways, but cursive writing still has its place in our lives. Brain health, better attention, and reading and writing in another format are all advantages to students learning cursive writing in school.

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