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Mandated public school cursive handwriting instruction in USA

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Zivio:
@AnasaziWrites posted a WSJ article about California’s new legislation requiring cursive handwriting instruction in public schools beginning January 02024:

Cursive is Back

California has joined 22 other states in the union to have fully mandated instruction, but there are some differences. Most of the other states have the requirement to teach by grades 3, 4 or 5.  Califonia’s, so far, is the only one requiring it in grades 1 through 6. Also, unlike the other states, California’s law cites teaching of cursive or joined italics.

I’m of two minds on the topic:

(1) The forces of technological change in communications are just too powerful to be overcome by merely requiring children to learn this in a few elementary school grades. My sense is that handwriting, sadly, will eventually die except as an art form, and mostly already has.

(2) As with giving children opportunities to learn and explore art, music, sports, vocational studies, etc., it is a wonderful thing to expose them to cursive writing. There will be some who find a great interest in it and learn to enjoy seeing historical and everyday handwritten communications, as I do, and even decide to practice it.

Erica McPhee:
I wonder who is advising the California school system. Grades 1-2 are too young for cursive writing IMHO. I started my kids in 3rd grade and  it was just the right time to avoid lots of frustration. Especially since so many children have developmental delays these days and immature pencil grasp. Handwriting for sure. Cursive, too early. Joined Italic is definitely an improvement over the standard manuscript style I was taught and that was taught in my children’s schools.

In regard to #1, I slightly disagree. I saw many of my kids’ friends say they wished they had learned cursive and could sign their names. I don’t think handwriting will die. Especially if our power grids fail before they can be refurbished (yikes!)  :o

#2 - YES!!!

Estefa:
In Germany Cursive is teached from Grade 1 (that is around the age of 6). I think a lot depends on the model of handwriting that is used, and also on how much time in the curriculum is actually used for practice. My kids learned a very simplified, just slightly slanted version of Copperplate-ish, they started with pencil drills, then letters, then words (like in Calligraphy really), and at the end of the first year usually the fountain pen is introduced. The exemplar they learned is easily to join – they all have nice handwriting in terms of legibility and fluidity. Developing one’s own style is encouraged as long as it’s readable. In contrast, in other states there are different models for Cursive, some are horrible and impossible to write fluidly. In some states they dropped Cursive altogether. It’s an ongoing debate …

I also don’t think handwriting will die – it will just be used differently and less frequently.

Vintage_BE:
Most European countries (including in any event Belgium) teach handwriting from the age of 6.
What has changed between the time that I went to grade school (the ‘60s) and the years that my children went to grade school (between 2004 and 2012) is that in the ‘60s, “handwriting” (or “schoonschrift” which translates into something like ‘penmanship’) was a required subject until the 5th grade (age 11). Nowadays, kids are being taught how to write in the first grade, but if I remember correctly ‘handwriting’ is not a separate subject anymore as from second or third grade. The result: kids develop, let’s say, “a personal style” early on; that style is tolerated as long as their handwriting is somewhat legible.
Our youngest (born on 30 December) started grade school months before he reached the age of 6; his “fine motoric skills” were underdeveloped, and it shows until today in his handwriting - he’s 23 and his handwriting looks, well, not great.
My wife teaches courses that require students to take (hand)written examinatons. Each year I am enlisted by her to help decipher some of the hieroglyphs that are being handed in. Even if we know (or strongly suspect) what the student intended to write, we regularly are unable to translate the scratches into any potentially intelligible word. Sigh.

Erica McPhee:
That’s quite impressive!


--- Quote from: Estefa on February 13, 2024, 03:43:53 PM ---In Germany Cursive is teached from Grade 1 (that is around the age of 6)… and at the end of the first year usually the fountain pen is introduced.

--- End quote ---

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