• @mhague@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    I don’t remember people ever writing cursive like what I was taught growing up. People just self-servingly turbo-scribble some chicken-scratch and call it a day. The kid who can’t read our B-movie elvish script isn’t the one with literacy issues.

    We either write within the ballpark of standardization, or we don’t. I think kids should be required to put in as much effort into learning cursive, as people put into actually writing cursive. Which is to say, absolutely none at all.

    (Sorry to people who actually write legible, clean cursive. I wish I got to read your output in the wild.)

    • @starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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      7 months ago

      The thing is, it’s easy to read good cursive. It’s just another script. It took me 5 episodes of Last Exile to memorize the Greek equivalents to English letters so I could read all the text without looking up the translation guide. But when their writing looks like Jack Lew’s signature, there’s not a whole lot I can do to decipher it

      • @stolid_agnostic@lemmy.ml
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        7 months ago

        Yes but really only the artistically minded and those with great manual dexterity have even a slim chance of doing it well. The rest has to write letters hundreds of times while their classmates go to recess.

    • @Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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      67 months ago

      feels like a lot of older people just use cursive as an excuse to cover up bad handwriting, because it’s harder to tell when it’s all squiggly in the first place

      like, there’s a reason we don’t write in fancy serif typefaces, that would result in most people’s writing being even less legible than it already is.

    • @MrShankles@reddthat.com
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      57 months ago

      I used to have really legible, accurate cursive. Someone made me feel embarrassed for still using cursive in middle school, so I stopped using it.

      Now I can’t remember cursive well enough to use it quickly, and my print looks like an elementary child did it. ALL CAPS print is a good way for me to make my print more legible

    • @Faresh@lemmy.ml
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      47 months ago

      turbo-scribble some chicken-scratch and call it a day

      But that’s cursive, isn’t it? I always considered cursive the script to be written when you just quickly need to write something down,being the style where the pen is raised the least, which happens to be the fastest way to write, at the cost of legibility. So cursive to me seems like the opposite of fancy.

      • @ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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        57 months ago

        Well,my teachers at the least insisted that cursive must be written perfectly, or you had to write it again.
        As in, “rewrite the assignment because the arch on this lower case n is too high”.

        • @Faresh@lemmy.ml
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          27 months ago

          I only had that in primary school, because it’s important to have legible handwriting (so the teachers can properly grade you being one of the reasons), and it’s easier to change behaviours early on in life before they become habits, but after that I never had anyone insist on or expect perfect handwriting.

          • @ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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            17 months ago

            Cursive was taught separately from print. In elementary school an assignment wouldn’t be accepted in print, and afterwards it wouldn’t be accepted in cursive.

      • @stolid_agnostic@lemmy.ml
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        7 months ago

        The thing is that back in the day you were expected to hand write all of your college assignments and printing or typewriting were not allowed. Because of that, it took decades and decades for enough older educators to die before people could use a computer for homework.

        • @TheSanSabaSongbird@lemdro.id
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          27 months ago

          Right. Depending on how old you are, you may have or did have older relatives who wrote in impeccable cursive. My grandmother, for example, who was a high school teacher from the 1940s through to the 70s, wrote cursive that looked almost machine-made because it was so perfect. But they actually taught penmanship as its own subject back when she was a kid in the 1930s.

    • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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      -127 months ago

      You’re just not old enough. Cursive was everywhere when I was a kid. They should still teach it to children because children learn language and writing easier than adults do. We should be able to read cursive. It is part of our language, and our history. Every old document is written in cursive. We shouldn’t end up with a society that can’t even read its original Constitution. That’s just Idiocracy.

        • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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          -77 months ago

          On a regular basis? No. Ever? Of course. Shakespeare is written in old English, the original translation of Homer’s The Odyssey, and the King James Bible, to name a few things.

          • @JungleJim@sh.itjust.works
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            7 months ago

            The King James Bible is pretty much modern English. Shakespeare too. They actually sort of standardized modern English. Old English, the language,not just English that is old, looks like Icelandic or weird German and is maybe 500 years older than that, give or take.

            Edit: Everyone who down voted your comment is dumb. Being willing to learn new things is a mark of high intelligence. Being grateful for the opportunity to learn is the sign of wisdom. Those who downvote you should instead emulate you. If we punish people for being happy to learn, they won’t want to learn.

            • VaultBoyNewVegas
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              27 months ago

              I remember an English teacher when I was at school talking about how he was teaching Beowulf to A level students and that it was very difficult for him as well not just the students.

            • @TheSanSabaSongbird@lemdro.id
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              17 months ago

              Pretty much only scholars. JRR Tolkien did, for example. The Rohirrim in the LOTR trilogy basically speak a form of Mercian Old English, if I recall correctly.

      • @mhague@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        I grew up in a house with a rotary phone and a meticulously maintained phone book (written in cursive.) If I’m too young to have been able to reliable hone my cursive-parsing skills, what can we expect of younger generations?

        The Flynn effect suggests people are generally getting smarter, remembering things better, etc. Something is happening to cause younger generations to be generally better than their ancestors. IQ scores have their problems but it’s still a hopeful sign.

        • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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          7 months ago

          Different circles I guess then. Everyone I knew wrote in cursive when I was younger. Regarding your intelligence comment, it’s not an intelligence issue, just an education and exposure issue. Learning cursive is easier than learning to write all-together, but if you’re never taught, and you’re not exposed to it, then you’re probably not going to learn it. It’s such a simple thing to learn that I don’t understand the aversion everyone on this thread has towards it. It’s pretty nice when you have to write a lot of text, like taking notes or journaling.

          • @Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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            47 months ago

            The aversion in my case comes from seeing time being wasted on that when teachers could use it to teach much more useful things or making sure that kids learned everything else they’ve been taught.

      • @ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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        67 months ago

        Language changes. Teaching an entire script to be able to read translated documents when there are practical skills that could be taught instead is silly.

        We don’t teach old English anymore, even though there’s a huge amount of our cultural history contained in it.
        We don’t even teach people about the eras when we used to use “f” in place if “s”, and that’s right in the middle of the constitution.

        Can you read the original magna carta? America would not be unique amongst English speaking nations in having issues dealing with language drift.

    • @MrShankles@reddthat.com
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      107 months ago

      Facts. Everybody’s “personal flair” on their style of cursive becomes a cryptographic puzzle. I exclusively used cursive until about 7th grade (because it was faster to me), and I still have to decipher most handwritten cursive

      • @PhlubbaDubba@lemm.ee
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        17 months ago

        Literally the only reason I use any cursive is because it’s useful to distinguish when you’re doing a lot of letter math for physics or calculus.

        That and being able to give people thank you cards with immaculate penmanship, still don’t use full cursive for that though, just slow deliberate writing with a bit of italic flair.

        Ironically enough I developed my modern handwriting style basically as an act of spite against a professor I was especially cross with in my junior year.

        Old bastard comes into class and yells at us about how we’re the worst scoring class he’s ever had and then expects me to not be in the front row visibly anger practicing my letters.

  • @OpenPassageways@lemmy.zip
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    7 months ago

    Conservatives are trying to prevent kids from learning history and sex ed, and we’re still hearing this bullshit lamentation about CURSIVE?

    Schools are underfunded, teachers are underpaid and overworked, students are graduating barely able to read and with no critical thinking skills.

    Who in their right mind is actually concerned about kids learning cursive?

    Things I’d rather schools focus on:

    Typing, Personal finance, Current events, Technology literacy, Graphic design, Human Computer Interaction

    Or maybe practical skills related to trades or how to fix things: CAD, Cooking, Electrical, Plumbing

    Literally ANYTHING but this cursive crap. It’s useless, it’s dead, move on.

    • @Socsa@sh.itjust.works
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      277 months ago

      To be fair, it’s trivially easy to learn cursive and it’s basically always been an extension of penmanship.

    • @lugal@lemmy.world
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      117 months ago

      How are you supposed to do any of this when your brain hemispheres aren’t connected? If you don’t link your letters, you ain’t wire your brain cells. /s

      I once saw a post on Facebook claiming this unironically. I learned cursive (or a simplified version I think) in school and thought it’s still the standard until I saw the Facebook post and was like “so what”. How can people get so emotional about such details? Teach your kid cursive at home when it’s so important for you! Oh, you don’t have kids but a strong opinion about education? Share it on Facebook! I’m not there anymore and for a while now.

    • Echo Dot
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      87 months ago

      Absolutely they need to teach finance. I remember when I had to get a mortgage for my house and it was a complete slog because I had absolutely no idea how the whole process was supposed to work. The thing is its actually not that complicated, but because I didn’t know what I was doing it took forever and was stressful.

      • @guacupado@lemmy.world
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        87 months ago

        Schools teach academics. Parents teach life skills. Teachers already have enough to handle, I don’t understand this recent push to make teachers teach shit that parents should be explaining.

        • @OpenPassageways@lemmy.zip
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          77 months ago

          I somewhat agree that you can’t expect teachers to teach kids everything. A professor explained to me once that school should teach you how to learn and a degree is a demonstration of your ability to learn.

          The issue I have with what you’re saying is that we know that not everyone wins the birth lottery and has two parents with the time to raise their kids properly.

          Public school should be an equalizer and it shouldn’t matter what kind of family you were born into. And yes, that probably means smaller class sizes, more teachers, more specialization of teachers, or just plain giving the teachers the resources they would need to teach some of these critical things. I know teachers and know that they are underpaid and overworked, we can’t ask more of them without addressing that first.

          I’m just very concerned about the long term impact to our civilization of leaving too much teaching up to parents who themselves are uneducated. There are no qualifications needed to become a parent, unlike being a teacher. Some parents that I talk to, you can’t get more than four sentences into a conversation with them before they start spouting off conspiracy theories or justifying racism and if schools aren’t allowed to teach these kids anything to the contrary then I fear for the future.

          I’m also concerned about the perverse incentive that corporations have in a capitalist economy to ensure that kids aren’t properly educated. Kids who aren’t taught anything about finance are more likely to be preyed on by credit card companies, student loan sharks, etc. Corporations are constantly working to deceive us on all matter of topics and kids need to have at least a baseline of understanding of some of these things or they will get screwed over really easily.

        • @EatATaco@lemm.ee
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          37 months ago

          Im kind of with you. It’s going to come off as arrogant, but in HS and college I feel like learned how to learn new things. I was never taught how to get a mortgage by my parents…nor any financial stuff for that matter. I learned it all myself. I read up on investing, when I went to get a mortgage I read up on that and learned the ins and outs. I learned the basics of retirement planning all on my own…because I grew up in a wealthy area where they could focus on these things due to socio-economic reasons.

          On the other hand, other people are not so lucky and these are vital life skills. If we aren’t going to be able to teach everyone how to really learn, we should probably be teaching them some of these common and basic life skills.

    • @EatATaco@lemm.ee
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      67 months ago

      My tiny quibble with your post is that I wish you had included critical thinking in your first list. Other than that this is spot on.

      That being said, my kids are learning cursive and I’m happy for it. It’s not something that requires years of in depth study to learn. My third grader is only a few months into school and can already read and write cursive after just starting it this year.

      But if it were gone, I wouldn’t bat an eye.

      • @hansl@lemmy.world
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        117 months ago

        You guys seem to be under the impression you can’t do both. I learnt all of that in high school (some as extracurricular but computers were relatively new). You can definitely have both.

        Cursive takes a few hours to learn to read.

        • @PhlubbaDubba@lemm.ee
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          27 months ago

          Maybe for an adult, but they literally spent two and a half years drilling it endlessly at my school and doomsaying about how you’d fail out if you didn’t master it, only for me to move on to middle school and immediately be presented with my first typed essay assignment.

          It’s just such a silly hill to die on all so people who did learn it don’t feel silly because nobody else reads it.

          • @Guntrigger@feddit.ch
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            17 months ago

            It sounds like the curriculum is a mess more than anything. You shouldn’t be taught something you are not allowed to then use.

      • Echo Dot
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        57 months ago

        When teaching how to drive a car they need to teach the skill of actually looking and processing what’s happening rather than just the mechanics of how to operate the vehicle.

        Most people seem to drive along without any real awareness of what’s happening around them which is what causes most accidents. Sure, that car shouldn’t have pulled out in front of you from a side road, but if you’d been paying attention you would have been able to see they were doing it, and avoided the crash.

    • @Bread@sh.itjust.works
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      07 months ago

      Now I may be a bit biased, but it would be nice if people could read my hand writing. There are just some people that write in cursive despite it not being taught. It was mentioned once in 2nd grade for me and for some reason it stuck.

  • @yamanii@lemmy.world
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    347 months ago

    This is so puzzling to me, here in Brazil everyone writes in cursive, we all learned fine as children, it exists because it’s easier and faster to write with it and you are going to write a lot during all your school life.

    • @ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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      87 months ago

      One thing I’ve picked up from these threads over time is that different places mean different things by “cursive”.
      In some places it’s treated as “how to write legibly by hand quickly” and in others it’s more of a formal writing system designed for signatures and the like.
      For example, we were required to use it while learning it, and then told not to use it for handwritten assignments once we left elementary school. It was preferred that things were written using print or typed was strongly preferred.

      Kids now don’t even have to write by hand as much, because typing is a vastly more practical skill.

      • @yamanii@lemmy.world
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        27 months ago

        Assignments were all done in Word, that’s normal, I mean it more like taking notes during class.

        • @ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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          37 months ago

          Notes weren’t graded, but assignments had to be handwritten in perfect cursive until it switched to being unacceptable to use cursive.

          Because they weren’t teaching efficient handwriting, they were teaching a second, slightly more formal, alphabet that can’t be used in most circumstances.

      • @AA5B@lemmy.world
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        -47 months ago

        That’s probably because you’re more experienced with one. The whole point of cursive is more efficient writing

    • @AA5B@lemmy.world
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      27 months ago

      In the US, my kids have done most assignments online since middle school. They’ve never needed cursive except for the brief refresher every year, and the occasional legal thing, such as a signature card to get a bank account.

      Although, I’m amused that my kid in 11th grade now has to hand-write some assignments for the first time, as a reaction to generative ai.

  • @Fallenwout@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Can someone explain why one cannot read cursive? It is just a tilted (sometimes fancy) font, what’s so hard about it?

    Edit: After being made aware by a fellow lemmy’er and googling it, it seems I confused cursive with italics, English is not my first language. Though I learned cursive at school when I was 6 without realizing it is called cursive in English. It was part of the basic curriculum at that time, didn’t know this wasn’t a thing in other countries.

    • @LesserAbe@lemmy.world
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      197 months ago

      There are some wonky letters, like capital G, S where if you never learned you wouldn’t know what you’re looking at.

    • @TealTallMachine@lemmy.world
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      137 months ago

      As someone who didn’t learn English as a first language, cursive is like another language to me. I don’t recognize half of the letters, and i never encountered it enough to properly learn it or have an incentive to learn it.

      • @Fallenwout@lemmy.world
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        -27 months ago

        [Serious]Can you read when you tilt a page 30° to the left? Or is it more about the font type than the font angle?

          • @Fallenwout@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            Your are correct, I looked up the difference.

            Seems though I learned cursive at school when I was 6 without realizing it is called cursive in English (English is not my first language) . Didn’t know this wasn’t a thing in other countries.

            I downvoted myself :D

    • Stez
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      87 months ago

      It’s not though like why the fuck is s a triangle that’s the only thing I know about it and can’t read it

      • @Fallenwout@lemmy.world
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        47 months ago

        It is not a triangle, it is a slash with a hook like /J but combined. You never lift your pen of the paper to write a word. Dots and dashes are added after the word is finished.

      • Captain Aggravated
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        37 months ago

        I think at one point a cursive S was “draw an S without lifting your pen from one letter to another” so it comes out looking a bit like an 8. Then the top loop got smaller and smaller, until the one guy who codified the cursive alphabet just didn’t put the top loop on at all.

        This same guy for some reason decided capital Q should look like a 2.

        If I were in charge of the curriculum, students would get an introduction to cursive and an afternoon playing with it, basically so they can recognize it as a “font” and read it. Then let them continue to print or more likely type their work.

    • @pseudo@jlai.lu
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      37 months ago

      I’m not so old and I have been taught writing and reading in cursive first, then the graphic evolution between cursive and block letters, so I could learn reading in block letters.

    • @zerofk@lemm.ee
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      37 months ago

      I was similarly confused when I first learned about this. We were never taught to write in “print”, so handwriting - cursive - was the norm.

  • @WarlordSdocy@lemmy.world
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    337 months ago

    I mean the problem isn’t whether they taught cursive or not, it’s whether you actually use it or not. Cause I was taught cursive in school but barely know how to write it now cause I never have to use it.

    • @TheActualDevil@lemmy.world
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      167 months ago

      I’m nearing 40 and haven’t been required to write in cursive since grade school. Don’t every use it unless more than a word or two a year probably. I have no problem writing in it on occasion. It’s just curvier versions of letters that you link by not picking your pen up. Sure, there are some weird capital letters, but generally, knowing the concept is enough to get it mostly right. I don’t really understand how some people struggle.

    • @DragonTypeWyvern
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      127 months ago

      She’s talking about students not being able to read it.

    • @MirthfulAlembic@lemmy.world
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      17 months ago

      Its purpose has passed. We don’t write with quills or dip pens anymore. Franky, we don’t write by hand much at all. Maintaining two systems of writing when handwriting is rapidly being reduced makes no sense. Your situation (I’m the same) is a great demonstration.

      I’d say cursive is the Roman numerals of penmanship. It’s a quaint thing to use for style, but that’s it.

  • HobbitFoot
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    327 months ago

    It isn’t just cursive. I’ve seen a lot of younger people have issues reading bad copies of older print letters. Part of it isn’t being used to seeing information presented in a certain way or not being found via OCR.

  • @blackn1ght@feddit.uk
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    217 months ago

    I thought cursive was the American word for joined up handwriting, but reading this thread I don’t really get what it means.

  • @Guntrigger@feddit.ch
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    207 months ago

    In this thread:

    Americans: Why do I need to learn it when I can just type?

    The World: It’s literally just writing. You don’t want to learn how to write??

    • @EatATaco@lemm.ee
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      397 months ago

      My kids are learning cursive and I’m glad they are doing so.

      But one of the main point of cursive was to be able to write more quickly, and typing has absolutely replaced that need, many times over. And also you learn print first, so not learning how to write cursive doesnt mean you don’t learn to write.

      Ironically, your post is supposed to be insulting Americans for not being smart, but God damn is the point fucking stupid and ignorant.

      • @Guntrigger@feddit.ch
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        -107 months ago

        It wasn’t meant to be insulting to Americans, the hate for learning to join up letters and write quickly just doesn’t really make sense to the rest of us.

        You know what’s stupid and fucking ignorant? Assuming everyone has a laptop on them all the time. Do people really not write notes anymore? Handwriting notes is much more conducive to learning than typing and is a basic skill that aids education at all levels.

        • @ShaRose@sh.itjust.works
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          87 months ago

          I’ve got a phone on me far more than I have a writing instrument, let alone paper: and I suspect that is true for the overwhelming majority of people.

          I’ll even just give you that cursive improves retention and learning and fine motor skills (there are studies that go either way, and my personal experience is that it did nothing at all, but fig leaf): is the benefit worth the time versus just having more time in class for the subjects in question?

          • @Globulart@lemmy.world
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            If you’re giving the idea that cursive improves retention and learning then I would say yes definitely.

            It’s a revision technique you can use for every exam, at the cost of what? a year of lessons once a week or so? (I have no idea how long cursive is learned for to be fair, I just learned to join writing in English while learning other stuff, seems like a weird thing to specifically have a lesson for to me).

            My point is you’re not going to learn a meaningful amount extra with that time, you’re already dividing your time by 10 or so subjects, having 10% more learning in each subject for 1 year out of the 11-15ish years in education won’t make a noticeable difference, certainly not more than learning an effective revision method for exams.

            Just my opinion anyway. As a kid I used to argue with teachers all the time that I shouldn’t have to write things by hand because I’d be typing the rest of my life anyway. That doesn’t help in office meetings taking notes though and even when I have a laptop the notes are no better honestly. I feel like if I learned to write then barely did it ever again it would be so slow that it would be a genuine disadvantage.

          • @Guntrigger@feddit.ch
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            07 months ago

            You’ll give it to me? Thanks I guess. All I’ve seen are studies that show the brain learns better when using handwriting over typing.

            I also tend to have a smartphone on me all the time, but if I’m in a situation to take notes, I’ll always bring some writing implement. I’m not taking notes in an office meeting on my phone for numerous reasons and even when I’m at a multiscreen computer I still want to take physical notes.

        • @EatATaco@lemm.ee
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          67 months ago

          It wasn’t meant to be insulting to Americans, the hate for learning to join up letters and write quickly just doesn’t really make sense to the rest of us.

          Lol this is like the best example of pissing on my foot and telling me it’s raining.

          You know what’s stupid and fucking ignorant? Assuming everyone has a laptop on them all the time.

          And if I had argued that we shouldn’t need to learn cursive because everyone has a laptop all the time, this wouldn’t be a completely fucking stupid argument. Alas, I did not.

          I also almost never write in cursive and know how. I can count on one hand how many times in my life I was like “oh crap! I should switch over to cursive to save some time!” and I lost all the fingers on that hand in a freak grenade accident (joking).

          This is especially stupid because I actually support kids learning cursive. It’s just a skill that is much less important than it was 50 years ago and so I don’t particularly care either way if kids learn it.

          You can just admit you were wrong, its much easier than trying to pile on more nonsense to justify the ignorant insult.

          • @Guntrigger@feddit.ch
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            -37 months ago

            I was wrong about what exactly? My facetious point about American and World views on the matter? I still think it was on point despite not being 100% serious.

            It’s absolutely commonplace in the UK to learn this at an extremely young age and not something that “takes up valuable learning time”. It seems weird not to learn it. How about we don’t learn how to paint either because most people don’t have use for watercolours in their daily life?

            I think the fact I’m being down voted by the Americans who don’t want to learn cursive is kind of a hilarious confirmation.

            • @Cornelius@lemmy.ml
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              27 months ago

              There’s no need to learn cursive, it serves no functional purpose that typing cannot match. Other than your signature, which… you have to learn how to do separate to cursive anyway to protect yourself from fraud by making it as unique and as difficult to replicate as possible.

              • @Guntrigger@feddit.ch
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                -27 months ago

                Good luck typing something when you have no electronic device nearby or no power. I know we live in a connected, techno-cebtric world now, but it’s wild to think that this simple skill is no longer valued at all by some.

                Also, your signature being the thing protecting you from fraud is quite hilarious from a European perspective too!

                • Encrypt-Keeper
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                  7 months ago

                  Since the invention of the smartphone I haven’t been without an electronic device nearby for a single moment. And if by some chance I find myself in this incredibly unlikely scenario, a power outage that’s long enough to outlast my phone battery, and for some reason desperately need to write something down, I could just write it down in print. That is, if I can even find a piece of paper and a writing utensil. I just don’t think the few times over the course of my life that this incredibly unlikely scenario happens, will make it somehow worth it to learn and remember a second form of hand writing when the first will do.

        • @frezik@midwest.social
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          7 months ago

          You can take notes without cursive. Even if it’s technically faster, most people’s cursive is an illegible scrawl, often even to themselves. I can scribble really fast, too, but so what?

          This is somewhere between annoying and a minor problem for most things. It became downright dangerous when doctors would write out a prescription, and the pharmacist would misread the dose by an order of magnitude or more.

          Also, I like using fountain pens, and I find I have to slow down anyway for the flow to be right. Modern one’s don’t tend to dribble ink the way an old quill pen might, so lifting it from the page is no problem.

          • @Guntrigger@feddit.ch
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            27 months ago

            Yeah you can also learn shorthand and take notes super fast. But that is a completely different language. Cursive is literally just joining up letters you are already learning at that point in school.

            • @BURN@lemmy.world
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              37 months ago

              Cursive is not just joining letters, at least how I was taught. Cursive is a completely different way of writing that involves specifically no up strokes. That’s separate from “joined writing” which is a term I haven’t heard before this thread.

              • @diannetea@lemmy.world
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                37 months ago

                I would call that calligraphy, not cursive. The cursive I was taught in the US has many upstrokes and you only lift your pen at the end to cross t and x and dot I and j.

                • @BURN@lemmy.world
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                  27 months ago

                  I think this may be the crux of the issue. Nobody was taught a consistent ‘cursive’. We were all taught basically different dialects, without really realizing it, so nobody can read anyone else’s cursive

              • @Guntrigger@feddit.ch
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                27 months ago

                I mean, that was also what I learned in the UK. We used fountain pens specifically so that it had to be no upstrokes, but the alphabet wasn’t as complex and dated as some people are posting examples of.

                I think “joined up” is just the trashy crude way we call it! I think I had heard of the band Cursive before knowing what it was.

        • Encrypt-Keeper
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          7 months ago

          You know what’s stupid and fucking ignorant? Assuming everyone has a laptop on them all the time.

          You’re right, that is stupid. Thats why most of us use smartphones, the fuck?

          • @Guntrigger@feddit.ch
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            07 months ago

            Yeah, it’s definitely not ignorant to assume everyone in the world can afford an expensive smart phone for every child to replace a simple pen and paper…

            • Encrypt-Keeper
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              7 months ago

              Anyone who is actively participating in society in a first world country can afford a cheap smartphone. And if you live in the U.S. and somehow can’t afford one, the government will give you one for free. So it isn’t so much “ignorant” as it is “accurate”

              • @Guntrigger@feddit.ch
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                07 months ago

                Ah yes, such accuracy. Fuck everyone that’s not in the US.

                Having to rely on my government to give me a smart phone, so I can take notes in class, is one of the oddest things I’ve heard to “prove” kids should not be taught a basic skill.

                • Encrypt-Keeper
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                  7 months ago

                  That’s the neat part, you don’t have to rely on the government to give you a smart phone to take notes in class. You can still take handwritten notes without cursive. It’s really very easy. It almost sounds like you don’t even know how to write legibly in print?

      • @foxbat@lemmings.world
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        7 months ago

        personally i’m left handed so school-taught cursive was much harder for me to write and t never got faster than block-letters (not sure what to call it, to me handwriting means non cursive and i would specify cursive but i know in other parts of the world that’s different so in this message i’ll use “block letters” to specific non-cursive) assuming i ever needed to read stuff again.

        but i think the main reason people hate it because a lot of people have terrible cursive handwriting. if it took the writer 25% less time to write but it takes the reader 2x as long to read… that’s fuckin annoying lol. i’m all for people using it for their personal notes but there’s a LOT of people who shouldn’t be using cursive for anything anyone else has to read.

        I used to do data entry for the post office and the number of people who addressed their letters with terrible cursive was way too high. the OCR could interpret most block-letter handwritten addresses but it couldn’t handle as many of the cursive ones because the characters are more ambiguous. often to read people’s cursive you need to use more context (ex. disambiguating through the words around it) which just isn’t possible for an address.

        for people using “block letters” the OCR would only fail on like, cards for grandma addressed by little kids and times when the scan cropped out the edge of the writing. but we got tons of shitty cursive handwriting.

        i later delivered mail for the post office and the distribution of block-letter vs cursive style handwriting was very different - more block-letter than cursive. making the overrepresentation of cursive amongst illegible addresses during my data entry time even more significant. it’s not a perfect sample data set but i keyed thousands of letters per day during the data entry job and when i did delivery i’d say dozens of the letters i sorted were addressed by hand most days so it was enough enough to give me strong opinions.

      • Echo Dot
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        7 months ago

        Because it’s impossible to read. Seriously it’s just random squiggles It could be in Arabic for all I know.

        If you want to write notes to yourself in cursive go ahead I don’t care but as soon as you need to communicate with other members of the human race it’s inappropriate. Especially if you also have poor handwriting.

        • @SendMePhotos@lemmy.world
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          57 months ago

          … Bro? I think this is peak ignorance for you. Take a breath and a step back, what’s up man?

          It sounds to me like you don’t know cursive, and don’t want to learn it because it’s difficult maybe? You have to give effort to learn things. Check out cursive and kind of teach yourself the letters and how to write. I’m sure there are apps out there, too.

          Otherwise like… don’t be a dick about the things you don’t like.

          • Echo Dot
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            -107 months ago

            Surely the ignorance is on you for insisting everyone learn a pointless skill just because you like it even though it’s a literally useless life skill.

            • @Guntrigger@feddit.ch
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              07 months ago

              Reading that “writing skill is literally pointless” is both going to fuel some laughs and despair for some time to come.

        • @nossaquesapao@lemmy.eco.br
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          37 months ago

          You’re explaining why you dislike it and why you prefer that it’s not used, but why the hate towards other people simply because they use it?

    • Encrypt-Keeper
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      87 months ago

      Well it’s not “just writing”, it’s a second, wholly distinct type of writing from our primary form of writing, and its use is usually reserved for writing personal letters, which is something nobody actually does anymore.

      If “cursive” has no meaning to you because it’s “just how you write”, then you have your explanation for why Americans don’t like it. We’re taught to write in print for everything important. And that means that everything important that we read is also in print. So cursive is just an extraneous form of writing, that the reasons to use are shrinking by the day.

      • @Guntrigger@feddit.ch
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        27 months ago

        That’s the point of my comment though. I think most of the world does see it as the primary form of writing. Block letter are used only for the most official documents.

        • Encrypt-Keeper
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          7 months ago

          It’s the same in the US for the most part. Block letters are used for official documents, however that is generally the only hand writing anyone in the US actually does. Do people outside of the U.S. write a lot of personal letters or something?

          I also wonder what type of writing non-US citizens are using. Because contrary to expectation, people in the U.S. do very commonly use a type of joined-up writing when writing personal notes, in journals, or on like greeting cards, but it is very distinct from what would be called “cursive”.

          • @Guntrigger@feddit.ch
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            27 months ago

            I feel like I’m going mad with this thread now. I write all the time be it notes or whatever, when I’m literally on a computer too. Weren’t post-its created in the US? What do you do with them just stick them around? Notebooks at school? Do they exist anymore? Or is everyone just using their expensive smartphones as notepads now?

            My mind is being blown by how little it seems you guys are using one of the most basic building blocks of society!

            • Encrypt-Keeper
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              37 months ago

              In American high schools many have tablets or laptops for school work and note taking. Some American high schools still have you do written reports instead of typed, but you’re not allowed to use cursive, you have to print.

              Overall you’re correct that handwriting as a whole has seen a steep decline in American culture, but it still exists in relative abundance, it’s just that the remaining use cases for it preclude the use of cursive writing.

              • @Guntrigger@feddit.ch
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                17 months ago

                It sounds like the use cases are specifically being reduced because of restrictions on using it within the same school system where it’s being taught. Which is just… odd.

                • Encrypt-Keeper
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                  47 months ago

                  You could say that, although I wouldn’t call it odd. Non-cursive print is more legible across a wider group of writers, so the restrictions make sense. There’s a reason the legal documents in even your country of origin are printed and not written in cursive script. It’s a choice of practicality over elegance which is just kinda indicative of American culture as a whole.

            • @EldritchFeminity@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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              27 months ago

              Just my personal experience, but American kids are taught cursive in elementary school (around age 8) and then basically told not to use it in favor of the print lettering they learned first.

              Schools require all assignments to be written in print, and I can’t remember the last time I saw cursive “out in the wild.” It’s just not used in daily life unless you make a habit of using it in your personal writing/notes. The only time it ever comes up again in American schools is where certain statewide exams or college applications or something will require you to write a paragraph in cursive and then grade you on the quality of your cursive. The emphasis is put on the shape of the lettering, not the speed vs readability of the writing. So for most people, their experience with cursive is being taught a skill they’re not supposed to use as a child, and then being judged for not using it almost a decade later because being able to write in it is supposed to make you look better for college admissions or something. Hence the hate.

              Most Americans generally write in something with some degree of the style of a cursive script but with clearly defined and separated lettering, like D’Nealian print. But our society heavily favors print writing in basically all facets of life and “true” cursive largely feels like something you pull out for special or formal occasions - like writing the annual Christmas card to grandma, or when you’re printing up wedding invitations or something.

  • @AgentGrimstone@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    The only times I used cursive was to sign my name on important documents. Now I don’t even do that anymore. I just write my name with normal letters without lifting the pen.

    • @trafficnab@lemmy.ca
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      27 months ago

      When I turned 18 and had to sign my social security card with my full name, I had to look up how to do the capital letter in my middle name in cursive because the last time I wrote one was in third grade in the early 2000’s

    • @Ilovethebomb@lemm.ee
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      127 months ago

      What’s the advantage though? What benefits does this have besides being able to read book covers written by people out of touch with their audience?

        • ChlorineAddict
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          -27 months ago

          To start, I’m pro teaching/learning cursive. To respond, my brain barely works fast enough to have letters for print, speeding up the writing isn’t the bottleneck.

        • @Gork@lemm.ee
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          177 months ago

          Signatures, not so much.

          Lots of completely illegible signatures out there lol

        • @cm0002@lemmy.world
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          137 months ago

          You can read other people’s signatures

          Why would you want to

          the constitution

          Plenty of verified print versions floating out there

          notes from your older lawyer

          If I’m paying someone 100$/minute, they’d better be able to write in print upon request

      • @constantokra@lemmy.one
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        37 months ago

        I use it when writing text along side math or diagrams, to differentiate it. I write cursive notes and use print to add emphasis. It’s also much easier to write legibly at a higher speed, which I’ll admit was more important before we typed as much as we do now. My cursive is at least as legible as my printing.

      • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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        7 months ago

        For you personally? Probably not much. For us as a society? Well, being able to read our laws and history in their original form is pretty important.

        • @Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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          97 months ago

          Not really, they’ve been transcribed and the people who need to be able to read the originals can learn just like people learn Latin if they need it, not as a mandatory language in school.

          • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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            -47 months ago

            Transcriptions are easy to alter. Kids learn reading and writing, and language in general much faster than adults. You can spend an hour a day for a few months with a kid and they’ll have it down pat.

            • @Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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              27 months ago

              It’s easy to learn cursive and compare if you’re that paranoid about it (although being extremely good at reading cursive doesn’t guarantee you’ll be able to read all documents written in cursive), it doesn’t mean everyone needs to learn it.

        • @SkyeStarfall@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          57 months ago

          Since when did you have access to the original writing of some law? If you want to find out a law today, you go on a government website.

      • @M500@lemmy.ml
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        17 months ago

        The advantage of learning it is being able to read when other people write with it.

        I’m not saying it’s common, but it’s not hard to learn to read and I’m sure you will come across it at some point.

        • @Ilovethebomb@lemm.ee
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          47 months ago

          being able to read when other people write with it.

          They can write legibly if they want me to read what they write.

          • @M500@lemmy.ml
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            17 months ago

            It’s not that someone is going to write something they want you to read.

            It’s more about someone wrote something and by chance you want to read it. The only problem is that it’s in cursive, you can’t.

        • Ech
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          -17 months ago

          I literally linked to an image showing exactly what it should look like.

          • @WarmSoda@lemm.ee
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            7 months ago

            That’s just a different font.
            I hope you know what fonts are.

            Edit. Apparently not, lol

            • @BURN@lemmy.world
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              -17 months ago

              That’s the only “font” taught as cursive to Americans. I’ve never seen anything like yours referred to as cursive

            • Ech
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              -27 months ago

              Well I’m pretty sure you don’t, since handwriting doesn’t have “fonts”.

  • @SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world
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    187 months ago

    Fuck cursive. Being forced to write in that was absolute torture. The forced use of specific esoteric hand-cramping illegible scribbles is asinine.

    There surely was a use for penmanship before the proliferation of ballpoint pens and typewriters, but the way it was taught while I was in school was completely backwards. The intent of writing in script is to quickly flow from one letter to another without needing to lift the nib of a quill; rote learning of individual hieroglyphs with full disregard for the writer’s natural hand movements is at best asinine, and at worst cruel.

    The fact that we were tormented decades in the past doesn’t justify more torment now. Be better.

    • @Deuces@lemmy.world
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      I find cursive is very useful when writing notes that only I will ever need to read. Reading and writing another persons cursive has never been easy for me and it has never impacted my life with one exception. I cannot read post cards from my aunt. Oh, and that time a decade ago when I had to fill out the “I will not cheat” pledge on the back of the SAT.

      Turns out if you need to write something with speed we have these things that are like typewriters, but they don’t even jam!

      • @Lemmygizer@lemmy.world
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        27 months ago

        Oh, and that time a decade ago when I had to fill out the “I will not cheat” pledge on the back of the SAT.

        One of the hardest sections of the SAT, right there

        • @Deuces@lemmy.world
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          187 months ago

          Never tried. Apparently yes, but I sound like a child reading each word like, “yeah, that’s definitely’vested’ I’m sure!”. I doubt the next generation will except a few people.

          I see your point, but I’m not sure I believe somebody could lie about it’s contents even in the distant future with how many legible copies there are.

          On another note, this website exists which is super cool! https://www.archives.gov/founding-docs/downloads

            • @Soggy@lemmy.world
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              27 months ago

              I’ve never once encountered such a book. The only times I see cursive are stuff from older relatives, and they all write differently to each other so it’s just a matter of familiarity, and on headings or labels trying to look fancy.

              Sometimes it comes up in old stuff for academic or personal interests but “knowing cursive” is often secondary to understanding those. Letters or papers intended for others are often perfectly legible, personal notes are a total mixed bag. (Looking at you, Charles Darwin.)

        • @ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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          -17 months ago

          You mean the one that starts with “congrefs” because the long s was a thing at the time and the letter f had a different meaning?

          How much time should we spend teaching school children about 200 year old antiquated orthography?

            • @ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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              37 months ago

              Because it’s a waste of time, and a lot of people were taught in a way that wasn’t the easy, quick way you seem to think it was.

              The way they taught me was to write the alphabet in a new script over and over for about an hour a day twice a week for several years. If you had poor handwriting you had to do it more, and you could fail lessons based purely on “didn’t shape your cursive S correctly”.

              Then you leave elementary school and teachers immediately switch to saying they won’t accept assignments in cursive, and then in highschool and college they won’t even accept handwritten.

              Slide rules are also easy to learn, but we don’t teach them because there’s no point to it.

    • @AVincentInSpace@pawb.social
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      17 months ago

      I was taught cursive and I do not remember it being anything like that. I am sorry for your experiences but I assure you they are not universal

  • @CompN12@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz
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    167 months ago

    For me I was taught cursive in elementary school, but it felt like I couldn’t keep up writing assignments so i just stuck with printing which evolved to chicken scratch notes.

    • @Squirrel@thelemmy.club
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      147 months ago

      I hate “formal” cursive, but the concept is solid – economy of motion, or time, or whatever. In fact, I’ve realized that some of my printing looks like cursive if I write quickly. Cursive that just looks pretty can go fuck itself.

    • @hydrospanner@lemmy.world
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      97 months ago

      Agreed.

      I had to learn it in elementary school, and for some extended amount of time, all schoolwork had to use it. Then for a while after that (a few years) some teachers would still require it. Best part was when they’d critique your handwriting too, so it was an aspect of your work that you didn’t gain points for, but that you could certainly lose points. I remember one poor girl that came in to our district in like 6th grade, after we’d already had all our training in it. She turned in a paper and I guess was just supposed to know not to print. The teacher made her redo it in cursive…and then didn’t like the way she drew a certain letter (different than how the school taught it), so she started subtracting a point for each time that letter appeared or something, so this girl ended up with like a -2 out of 10 or some shit. I guess the issue was worked out somehow but I remember even as a kid thinking “wow what a dick move”.

      As soon as the requirements from teachers stopped, I quit using cursive and have never once ever needed to use it since (aside from my signature).

      Not once.

      It’s something interesting to learn and I think it’s definitely worth teaching kids how to read it and how to write with it themselves…but it should be something that’s like…a few weeks of instruction per year, from grades 3-5. Not all year, not required in all subjects. Just “a few weeks each year, we teach the kids this skill and then give them a refresher”. Maybe require it in “cursive month” each of those years, and certainly accept it anytime. But way less emphasis than my school put on it.

  • @Sawy@lemmy.world
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    167 months ago

    I write exclusively in cursive. It’s natural for me and everyone around me was taught it as well.