TULSA — You may want to hold off before sending that handwritten note to your grandchild.
That’s because a growing number of young people can no longer read cursive.
Since the U.S. adopted Common Core standards in public schools back in 2010, cursive has declined and even disappeared entirely in some school districts.
But, is erasing cursive to the detriment of future generations?
We’re doing some homework on the collapse of cursive in this Denver7 360 report, talking with a calligrapher who says there’s still benefits to knowing cursive, a professor who teaches future teachers, a tutor who says good riddance and another who says it still has some practicality.
Let’s begin with keeping cursive alive - in the home studio of Srujana Nimmagadda, owner of Menakshee Designs.
“Learning to write well is something that you’re never going to regret,” said Nimmagadda, whose day job is working at Ball Aerospace as an aerospace engineer. “I know it’s unique that I also do calligraphy,” she said.
For her, it’s not a cloudy issue at all; good handwriting has value.
“I think there’s just a different sort of connection that you have receiving a hand-written letter,” Nimmagadda said.
And she argues there’s a quiet confidence projected when communicating in cursive.
“If there’s a way to keep it in schools, I think they should,” she said.
That brings us to Dr. Krista Griffin, a literacy professor at Metropolitan State University of Denver.
“There isn’t a lot of research supporting cursive one way or another,” Griffin said.
She has 25 years of experience teaching future teachers.
“There’s no one-size-fits-all anything in education,” Griffin said. “That’s what I tell those future teachers.”
Griffin says in the 21st century, with high stakes standardized testing, cursive isn’t always worth valuable classroom time, especially given the demands put on teachers today.
“If I’m a teacher and I know my job is dependent on how well my students do, cursive isn’t on the test,” she said.
But, she also sees strong cognitive learning with reading and writing in cursive.
“When I’m taking notes, I can’t move as quickly as when I’m keyboarding,” Griffin said. “So, I’m going to be thinking about what the professor is saying and paraphrasing, which is a higher-level cognitive skill.”
Other experts agree.
“There’s a myth that in the era of computers we don’t need handwriting,” said a leading national researcher. “That’s not what our research is showing. What we found was that children until about Grade 6 were writing more words, writing faster and expressing more ideas if they could use handwriting — printing or cursive.”
But - Victor Camacho questions the time-commitment given to cursive.
“I learned cursive when I was in 3rd grade,” Camacho said. “And I haven’t used it since. There was no real practical reason to use it.”
Camacho is now the owner of High Performance Tutoring, with 35 Denver-based tutors. His tutors put a heavy emphasis on STEM disciplines.
“Art is practical in that it kind of feeds our soul in a sense,” Camacho said. “But, it’s not practical in the sense that, ‘Oh – you need to eat.’”
He believes a greater emphasis on things like statistics, personal finance and computer programming would be much more beneficial in school than teaching cursive.
Camacho believes higher proficiency in those skills could also alleviate many ongoing societal issues.
“If we replace cursive with helping people manage their finances, I think that would go a long way,” he said. “How to manage money and how compounding interest works and how investments work and risks vs. returns. That’s what children should be learning.”
Stephanie Rosalky is the owner of Wash Park Tutoring, and she doesn’t disagree.
“Cursive is not a skill that is needed today to be successful,” Rosalky said. “Everything has really moved to a technology platform.”
But, Rosalky says cursive does have practical applications, for example, it can help with disorders like dyslexia on a case-by-case basis.
“It kind of limits some reversals that are happening for students,” Rosalky said.
“I have a friend who has dyslexia and she will do less reversals and omit fewer letters when she uses cursive,” Griffin said.
Both Griffin and Rosalky also respect the argument that cursive is a long-forgotten, elegant form of writing that is appreciated more by older generations.
“They see it as a very personal way of communicating that gets lost,” Griffin said.
“It is beautiful,” Rosalky said. “It looks very nice.”
And that brings us back to Nimmagadda.
“There’s something very grounding about picking up a pen and paper,” Nimmagadda said. “There’s a lot of history and tradition. You can tell what’s happening in a society through the years as you study a style of script.”
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