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By TOM BREEN, Associated Press Writer Tom Breen, Associated Press Writer Sat
Sep 19, 9:44 am ET
CHARLESTON, W.Va. Charleston resident Kelli Davis was in for a surprise when
her daughter brought home some routine paperwork at the start of school this
fall. Davis signed the form and then handed it to her daughter for the
eighth-grader's signature.
"I just assumed she knew how to do it, but I have a piece of paper with her
signature on it and it looks like a little kid's signature," Davis said.
Her daughter was apologetic, but explained that she hadn't been required to
make the graceful loops and joined letters of cursive writing in years. That
prompted a call to the school and another surprise.
West Virginia's largest school system teaches cursive, but only in the 3rd
grade.
"It doesn't get quite the emphasis it did years ago, primarily because of all
the technology skills we now teach," said Jane Roberts, assistant
superintendent for elementary education in Kanawha County schools.
Davis' experience gets repeated every time parents, who recall their own hours
of laborious cursive practice, learn that what used to be called "penmanship"
is being shunted aside at schools across the country in favor of 21st century
skills.
The decline of cursive is happening as students are doing more and more work on
computers, including writing. In 2011, the writing test of the National
Assessment of Educational Progress will require 8th and 11th graders to compose
on computers, with 4th graders following in 2019.
"We need to make sure they'll be ready for what's going to happen in 2020 or
2030," said Katie Van Sluys, a professor at DePaul University and the president
of the Whole Language Umbrella, a conference of the National Council of
Teachers of English.
Handwriting is increasingly something people do only when they need to make a
note to themselves rather than communicate with others, she said. Students
accustomed to using computers to write at home have a hard time seeing the
relevance of hours of practicing cursive handwriting.
"They're writing, they're composing with these tools at home, and to have
school look so different from that set of experiences is not the best idea,"
she said.
Text messaging, e-mail, and word processing have replaced handwriting outside
the classroom, said Cheryl Jeffers, a professor at Marshall University's
College of Education and Human Services, and she worries they'll replace it
entirely before long.
"I am not sure students have a sense of any reason why they should vest their
time and effort in writing a message out manually when it can be sent
electronically in seconds."
For Jeffers, cursive writing is a lifelong skill, one she fears could become
lost to the culture, making many historic records hard to decipher and robbing
people of "a gift."
That fear is not new, said Kathleen Wright, national product manager for
handwriting at Zaner-Bloser, a Columbus, Ohio-based company that produces a
variety of instructional material for schools.
"If you go back, you can see the same conversations came up with the advent of
the typewriter," she said.
Every year, Zaner-Bloser sponsors a national handwriting competition for
schools, and this year saw more than 200,000 entries, a record.
"Everybody talks about how sometime in the future every kid's going to have a
keyboard, but that isn't really true."
Few schools make keyboards available for day-to-day writing. The majority of
school work, from taking notes to essay tests, is still done by hand.
At Mountaineer Montessori in Charleston, teacher Sharon Spencer stresses
cursive to her first- through third-graders. By the time her students are in
the third grade, they are writing book reports and their spelling words in
cursive.
To Spencer, cursive writing is an art that helps teach them muscle control and
hand-eye coordination.
"In the age of computers, I just tell the children, what if we are on an island
and don't have electricity? One of the ways we communicate is through writing,"
she said.
But cursive is favored by fewer college-bound students. In 2005, the SAT began
including a written essay portion, and a 2007 report by the College Board found
that about 15 percent of test-takers chose to write in cursive, while the
others wrote in print.
That was probably smart, according to Vanderbilt University professor Steve
Graham, who cites multiple studies showing that sloppy writing routinely leads
to lower grades, even in papers with the same wording as those written in a
neater hand.
Graham argues that fears over the decline of handwriting in general and cursive
in particular are distractions from the goal of improving students' overall
writing skills. The important thing is to have students proficient enough to
focus on their ideas and the composition of their writing rather than how they
form the letters.
Data from the National Center for Education Statistics show that 26 percent of
12th graders lack basic proficiency in writing, while two percent were
sufficiently skilled writers to be classified as "advanced."
"Handwriting is really the tail wagging the dog," Graham said.
Besides, it isn't as if all those adults who learned cursive years ago are
doing their writing with the fluent grace of John Hancock.
Most people peak in terms of legibility in 4th grade, Graham said, and Wright
said it's common for adults to write in a cursive-print hybrid.
"People still have to write, even if it's just scribbling," said Paula Sassi, a
certified master graphologist and a member of the American Handwriting Analysis
Foundation.
"Just like when we went from quill pen to fountain pen to ball point, now we're
going from the art of handwriting to handwriting purely as communication," she
said.